Timber compliance consultants, forestry advisors, EUTR transition specialists, wood import due diligence firms. Regulation (EU) 2023/1115 replaces the EU Timber Regulation — Regulation (EU) No 995/2010 is repealed by Article 37. The shift is structural: from legality-only verification per supplier to deforestation-free verification per lot with geolocation coordinates down to six decimal digits. Each timber shipment, each wood lot, each supply chain requires its own due diligence statement under Annex II. The consultant who already managed EUTR compliance faces a documentation requirement that is broader, deeper, and lot-specific. EUDRCheck Professional Pack: 70 licenses, €1,999 one-time. 8 structured PDF documents per commodity lot. Generated in the browser in 20 minutes.
€1,999 · One-time · 70 dossiers · 8 PDFs each · Your data never leaves your browser
Every importer of tropical hardwood, every processor of wood products, every operator placing timber on the EU market needs lot-specific due diligence documentation. The consultant who can produce structured DDS at scale — across species, across origins, across clients — holds the capacity to transition an entire client portfolio from EUTR to EUDR without months of manual drafting.
EUDRCheck Professional Pack is designed for any professional who delivers — or intends to deliver — EUDR due diligence documentation to timber and wood product importers.
Three inputs. Four answers. No signup required.
Each license generates a complete due diligence documentation package under Regulation (EU) 2023/1115. Each document references the specific article it covers. The client does not need access to the tool — the consultant enters the data and delivers the finished package.
Identifies the relevant commodity (Article 2.1), product CN codes (Annex I — wood products from HS 4401 to 9406), and operator or trader status (Article 2.15–17).
Complete Annex II structure. Operator identification, HS code, quantity, country of production, geolocation of plots, species scientific name for wood. Article 4(2).
Article 9 information requirements. Common name and full scientific name of species, supplier documentation, product description, trade name, quantity by net mass.
Article 9(1)(d) and Article 2(28). Coordinates with six decimal digits. Polygons for forest concessions exceeding 4 hectares. Date or time range of harvest.
Systematic analysis against the 14 criteria of Article 10(2). Country risk classification (Article 29), forest degradation assessment (Article 2.7), FLEGT license verification (Article 10.3).
Article 11 procedures. Additional information requirements, independent surveys or audits, measures to achieve negligible risk. Documented and reviewable.
Evidence against the 31 December 2020 cut-off date (Article 2.13). For wood: verification that harvesting did not induce forest degradation (Article 2.13.b).
Article 2(40) compliance. 8 legal categories verified: land use rights, environmental protection, forest-related rules including forest management and biodiversity conservation, labour rights, FPIC.
See before you buy — Download sample dossier (PDF, fictional company) — Real structure, real articles, real format. Fictional data.
The EU Timber Regulation (Regulation (EU) No 995/2010) required due diligence at operator level, focused on legality of harvesting, and operated per supplier. The EUDR (Regulation (EU) 2023/1115) requires due diligence per commodity lot, adds deforestation-free verification against a 31 December 2020 cut-off date, demands geolocation with six decimal digits for every plot of land (Article 9.1.d), and introduces a structured DDS format (Annex II). EUTR dossiers cannot be relabelled as EUDR documentation. Each lot needs a new statement under the new framework.
EUTR due diligence templates covered legality assessment and supplier risk. EUDR documentation must follow the Annex II format, include geolocation coordinates or polygons, cover the 14 risk assessment criteria of Article 10(2), document deforestation-free status against the cut-off date, and verify compliance with the country of production legislation across 8 legal categories (Article 2.40). A EUTR template does not map to these requirements. The risk is delivering documentation that does not meet the standard competent authorities will enforce.
Regulation (EU) No 995/2010 is repealed with effect from 30 December 2025 (Article 37 as amended). From that date, every timber lot placed on the EU market must be covered by a due diligence statement under the EUDR. The consultant who starts transitioning clients now has the capacity, the templates, and the experience when enforcement begins. The one who waits will face 25 clients simultaneously needing new documentation — with no production system in place.
8 structured PDF documents per timber lot. Due diligence statement (Annex II), risk assessment (Article 10), geolocation mapping (Article 9.1.d), supply chain traceability (Article 9), deforestation-free and no forest degradation verification (Article 2.13), country of production legality check (Article 2.40). Generated from the data entered in 20 minutes.
On-site forest concession audits, satellite imagery analysis, wood anatomy or DNA species verification, FLEGT licensing, FSC or PEFC certification auditing, physical inspection of sawmills or processing facilities. These are implementation and verification services. EUDRCheck documents the due diligence — it does not conduct field verification.
EUDRCheck structures and documents. The consultant advises, verifies species, and manages supplier relationships. The two layers complement each other — and together form a complete EUDR timber compliance service.
These are the consequences under Article 25 of Regulation (EU) 2023/1115. For the timber importer who has been operating under EUTR and asks whether the transition is urgent — this is the answer.
Article 25(2)(a) of Regulation (EU) 2023/1115. Fines proportionate to environmental damage and value of the commodities concerned. Increased for repeated infringements.
Article 25(2)(b) and (c). Confiscation of the relevant products from the operator and confiscation of revenues gained from the transaction.
Article 25(2)(d) and (e). Exclusion from public procurement for up to 12 months. Temporary prohibition from placing or making available relevant commodities on the market for serious or repeated infringements.
Your clients face these consequences. You offer them the documentation that prevents them — and build a timber compliance practice on the obligation.
| Option | Cost for 40 lots | Total time | Output quality |
|---|---|---|---|
| Manual drafting (adapted EUTR templates) | Professional time only | 600+ hours | Variable, EUTR structure does not map to EUDR |
| Outsource to specialist firm | €80,000–€200,000 | Depends on provider | High, but eliminates margin |
| Enterprise SaaS platform | €15,000–€30,000/year | 2–4 weeks setup | High, requires integration |
| EUDRCheck Professional Pack | €1,999 (one-time) | ~13 hours total | Structured, Annex II, article by article |
EUDRCheck generates a structured documentation package according to the due diligence requirements of Regulation (EU) 2023/1115 from the information the user enters. The accuracy, precision, and completeness of that information is the responsibility of the operator — or the professional who enters data on their behalf.
We guarantee that the document structure follows Articles 8–11 and Annex II of Regulation (EU) 2023/1115 and that the legal references cited are correct as of the last verification date. We do not guarantee that a specific document will be accepted by a market surveillance authority or by a commercial buyer in a procurement process.
EUDRCheck is not legal advice. For specific situations, consult with a lawyer or regulatory compliance consultancy.
70 licenses. 8 PDF documents per timber lot. Annex II structure. In the browser. One payment.