Amazon FBA handles fulfillment, but packaging rules are getting more demanding. And harder to configure. 

The Packaging and Packaging Waste Regulation (PPWR) requires all packaging to be registered and reported in accordance with specific requirements. These requirements also apply in full to FBA sellers.

Amazon covers only the delivery of your goods, but it doesn’t deal with your compliance responsibilities.

Enforcement begins on August 12, 2026. Non-compliance may result in listing suspension or removal.

For enterprise sellers, things get increasingly complex as they grow. Packaging needs to be monitored and controlled across all your product catalogs and markets in the EU.

So, let’s break down the PPWR and find out how to deal with them. 

Scaling in the EU Means Scaling Compliance

As your EU business grows, packaging compliance becomes harder to manage.

Each country adds its own registration and reporting requirements. Those obligations continue long after the initial setup. What starts as a compliance task quickly becomes an ongoing operational responsibility.

Catalog growth adds another layer of complexity. Different products may use different packaging materials, follow different formats, or come from different suppliers. At scale, those variations create inconsistencies that are difficult to control across markets.

Packaging compliance requires a clear process. You can’t treat it as a one-off task or a back-office detail. It influences listing health, data accuracy, and your ability to keep selling without disruption. Strong systems keep product data aligned. Weak systems let small issues grow into larger problems.

Amazon FBA Shipping Requirements

Amazon FBA Packaging Basics Before EU Compliance

Before you deal with Extended Producer Responsibility requirements and the new EU Packaging Waste Regulation, you need to make sure your products meet Amazon’s own FBA packaging standards.

Amazon uses these rules to receive, scan, store, and fulfill inventory. If your packaging doesn’t meet them, shipments may be delayed, rejected, or repackaged for a fee. At scale, even small packaging mistakes can affect receiving speed, inventory availability, and operational costs.

General Amazon FBA packaging requirements

Amazon applies a few core requirements to most products sent to its fulfillment centers:

  • Use a unique FNSKU for every unit. Each unit must have a unique FNSKU that corresponds to a specific product. Variations such as size, color, or condition must use different FNSKUs.
  • Make sure the barcode is easy to scan. Every unit needs an exterior scannable barcode or label that stays visible and accessible. Don’t place it on corners or curved surfaces that make scanning harder.
  • Remove or cover extra barcodes. If other scannable barcodes appear on the packaging, remove them or make them unreadable. Otherwise, Amazon may scan the wrong code upon receipt.

If you miss these requirements, Amazon may refuse the shipment, return it, or repackage it and charge an unplanned service fee.

Packaging types and preparation rules

Amazon also sets product-specific prep rules depending on how the item is packaged.

  • Sold as a set or bundle. Sets must be clearly labeled so that Amazon can receive and sell them as a single unit. The packaging must remain sealed, and bundled items should use a single ASIN. If individual items inside the set already have barcodes, those barcodes shouldn’t face outward or must be covered.
  • Boxed units. Boxes must have six sides, stay closed during handling, and resist pressure without collapsing. If the packaging has perforated sides or openings, the product must pass Amazon’s drop test. If it fails, additional protection, such as a poly bag, may be required.
  • Poly-bagged units. Poly bags must be transparent, fully sealed, and at least 1.5 mil thick. The barcode must remain scannable through the bag, or you need to place it on the outside. The bag should also fit the product closely, since loose bags can affect measurements and storage fees.
  • Case-packed products. Case packs must contain the same SKU in the same condition, packed in equal quantities in every box. Amazon limits case packs to 150 units. Only the units inside the case should have scannable barcodes, not the outer case itself.
  • Products with expiry dates. Expiry dates must appear on both the primary box and the individual unit in the format Amazon accepts. If the printed format is different, you must add a label with the correct one. Amazon also requires the expiry date to stay visible during receiving.

Where Amazon’s role ends

Amazon handles fulfillment after your inventory enters its network. That includes storage, order handling, and delivery packaging.

You still own the product packaging, labeling, and preparation before the goods reach Amazon. You also remain responsible for meeting EU packaging compliance requirements, including EPR obligations and the new packaging rules that apply in each market.

That distinction matters. Amazon supports logistics, but it doesn’t take over your regulatory responsibility.

It is also a good idea to review Amazon’s official FBA packaging guidance before each major shipment cycle, as prep and labeling requirements may change over time.

EU Packaging Regulations: EPR and PPWR

Meeting Amazon’s packaging standards is only the first layer. Sellers in the EU also need to manage packaging compliance under EPR and the new PPWR rules.

EPR makes sellers responsible for packaging waste

Under Extended Producer Responsibility, the business that places packaged goods on the market takes responsibility for the packaging.

That responsibility can cover product packaging, secondary packaging, and, in some cases, transport packaging. It also extends beyond the sale, since sellers are responsible for the waste generated by that packaging.

Check the requirements for each country on the Amazon EPR requirements page

PPWR raises the compliance standard

The Packaging and Packaging Waste Regulation replaces the older directive and introduces stricter rules across the EU.

Its main priorities are to reduce waste, improve the recyclability of packaging, and strengthen circular-economy requirements across member states.

The key date is August 12, 2026. That is when enforcement begins under the new framework.

Selling in more EU countries means more compliance work

The challenge grows quickly when you sell across several EU countries.

Markets such as Germany, France, Spain, Italy, Belgium, the Netherlands, Ireland, Poland, and Sweden each require separate compliance. For larger sellers, that means multiple registrations, multiple reporting flows, and ongoing compliance work running in parallel.

What sellers need to do

To keep selling in these markets, you need to complete several steps in each country:

  • Register locally. You need to register in every country where your packaging obligations apply.
  • Obtain an EPR Registration Number (ERN). This number confirms that your business is registered for packaging compliance in that market.
  • Report packaging data. Reporting usually includes packaging materials, weight, and volume.
  • Submit your ERN in Seller Central. Amazon asks sellers to provide this information through Account Health → Manage Compliance.

This isn’t a one-time task. You need to maintain registrations and ongoing reporting.

Important points sellers often miss

  • Pay-on-Behalf doesn’t replace registration. Amazon may support certain payment flows, but sellers still need to register and submit their ERN. PPWR doesn’t remove that requirement.
  • FBA doesn’t reduce packaging responsibility. FBA changes how Amazon stores and ships your products. As we’ve already mentioned, it doesn’t relieve you of your responsibility for product packaging or EPR compliance.
  • Enforcement will affect operations. From August 2026, compliance gaps may lead to listing restrictions, account health issues, or blocked offers in specific markets. For large sellers, those problems can spread fast across multiple listings and countries.

You can find a full breakdown of the new rules in our Amazon EU EPR guide.

How M2E Helps Manage FBA at Scale

M2E Cloud doesn’t replace EPR registration or legal reporting. You still need to register in each country, obtain EPR numbers, and submit packaging data where required.

What M2E Cloud does is handle the operational side of selling at scale. This is where compliance often breaks down in practice.

With Amazon FBA and multiple EU marketplaces, product data can drift. Listings, attributes, and stock levels may not match across sales channels. As your catalog expands, these inconsistencies grow. M2E Cloud helps you keep product data consistent and under control.

What you deal with every day

Selling with FBA across multiple EU markets means handling constantly moving parts. Inventory changes, listings need updates, and orders flow through different systems.

  • Inventory goes out of sync. Stock levels don’t match across Amazon, your store, and other channels. This leads to overselling or missed sales.
  • Listings become inconsistent. Product data differs between marketplaces. Prices, titles, or attributes fall out of sync.
  • Manual updates slow everything down. Teams spend time updating stock, adjusting listings, and fixing errors instead of focusing on growth.
  • Multiple systems create gaps. Data sits across different platforms, making it harder to stay in control as your catalog grows.

How M2E brings structure to daily operations

If you are responsible for preparing and sending products to Amazon FBA, M2E Cloud handles what comes next – inventory management and daily operations across channels.

M2E is built for multichannel sellers and supports 600+ marketplaces, including Amazon, eBay, TikTok Shop, Temu, and more.

  • Centralized inventory management.  Keep stock levels aligned across all connected channels in real time.
  • Multichannel FBA fulfillment. Use Amazon FBA not only for Amazon orders, but also to fulfill orders from other marketplaces.
  • Automated listing and order workflows. Reduce manual updates with flexible rules for pricing, quantity, and order processing.
  • Unified order and data management. M2E syncs data between your store and marketplaces so you can track listings, inventory, and every order from a single dashboard.
M2E Multichannel Connect

What better control looks like

You run a more consistent operation across inventory, listings, and orders, without adding unnecessary complexity to your daily workflows. This helps you stay organized as your catalog grows and your sales channels expand.

The more markets you manage, the more important that control becomes. Reliable data supports smoother operations and helps you work with greater confidence across the EU.

The Bottom Line

Amazon FBA packaging in the EU is no longer just about meeting basic prep requirements. It now sits within a broader compliance framework.

With PPWR enforcement coming in 2026, proper packaging alone will not be enough. You also need control over your product data, internal processes, and day-to-day operations.

When your business is structured, compliance becomes easier to manage. Without that structure, small gaps can quickly turn into larger problems.

Amazon FBA Packaging Requirements for the EU in 2026
author avatar
Kateryna Oriekhova
A content writer with over 8 years of experience in eCommerce and marketplace integrations. Passionate about the latest industry trends and the inner workings of online selling, she transforms complex topics into clear, engaging blog posts, landing pages, and user-friendly guides.
Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *