TL;DR: Selecting a barrier material without confirming its regulatory status across your target markets is the fastest way to fail customs clearance or trigger a retailer delistment.
TL;DR: EU food-contact packaging must comply with EU 10/2011, which restricts over 900 substances — and a migration limit of 10 mg/kg for the overall migration level (OML) applies regardless of whether your material is film, coating, or laminate.
Regulatory Frameworks That Govern Barrier Material Selection #
Barrier materials sit at the intersection of performance engineering and compliance law. A film that passes your OTR target of ≤ 1.0 cc/m²/day can still be non-compliant if the adhesive layer contains a restricted substance under EU Regulation No 10/2011 or if the ink chemistry migrates above the specific migration limit (SML) for a listed monomer.
The three major regulatory regimes — EU, US, and China — have different scope, enforcement models, and documentation requirements. We track all three internally because our brand partners ship into multiple territories from a single production run. The table below summarises the key distinctions:
| Regulatory Dimension | EU | US (FDA) | China (GB Standards) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Primary framework | EU 10/2011 (plastics); REACH (substances) | FDA 21 CFR 174–178 | GB 9685-2016 (additives); GB 4806 series |
| Migration limit (overall) | 10 mg/kg or 60 mg/dm² (OML) | No single OML; substance-by-substance FCN/GRAS | 10 mg/dm² for total migration (GB 5009.156) |
| Enforcement model | Pre-market compliance; importer liability | Pre-market notification (FCN) or GRAS affirmation | CQC certification for imported materials; NME approval |
| PFAS restrictions | Restricted under REACH SVHC; PPWR 2025 tightening | State-level patchwork; EPA PFAS action plan active | Not yet systematically restricted; expected update post-2025 |
| Recyclability requirement | PPWR mandates recyclable-by-design by 2030 | No federal mandate; extended producer responsibility by state | GB/T 16288 labelling; draft EPR regulation in progress |
The EU column is where we see the most documentation requests from our brand partners. Since the European Chemicals Agency (ECHA) SVHC candidate list now includes over 240 substances, the overlap with barrier coating chemistry — particularly fluoropolymer-based moisture barriers — is significant and growing.
Where Compliance Failures Actually Originate #
The most common failure mode we see on incoming jobs isn’t a material that was deliberately non-compliant. It’s a material that was qualified for one market and assumed to transfer cleanly to another.
A US brand transitioning a snack pouch from domestic retail to EU grocery will often arrive with a qualification package built entirely around FDA 21 CFR 176.170 (paper and paperboard in contact with aqueous and fatty foods) or 177.1520 (polyolefin films). Neither of these maps directly onto EU 10/2011 compliance, because the EU framework requires a positive list confirmation for each functional barrier layer, including adhesive tie layers as thin as 5–10 µm. We’ve received substrate samples where the aluminium oxide (AlOx) coating passed OTR and WVTR performance specs but lacked a Declaration of Compliance (DoC) for the EU market — the brand assumed the converter’s technical datasheet was equivalent. It isn’t.
A second failure pattern involves ink and coating interaction with the functional barrier layer. Under EN 645:1993 and EN 646:2006 (paper and board in contact with food), surface-printed inks are generally outside the functional barrier scope — but in laminate constructions where the ink layer sits between plies, migration through an incomplete seam weld or delaminated edge becomes a real pathway. We flag this during what we call our Laminate Stack Review (LSR-04), which maps each layer against its applicable standard before sampling begins. Brands that skip a formal DoC chain for each sublayer are the ones who get held at customs.
The third scenario is REACH compliance for non-food packaging. Many barrier functional coatings — silicone release liners, UV-barrier varnishes, anti-static treatments — contain substances that are on or approaching the SVHC list. REACH Article 33 of Regulation EC 1907/2006 requires suppliers to notify downstream users if an article contains an SVHC above 0.1% w/w. When a brand reformulates a premium cosmetic carton and adds a UV-barrier coating to protect photosensitive product inside, they’re adding an article component that must be tracked. We check this at the AVL gate for every new coating supplier.
Does FDA 21 CFR Compliance Cover Canadian and Australian Market Entry? #
No — and the assumption that it does is surprisingly common among US-based brands expanding internationally.
Canada uses the Food and Drug Regulations (FDR) B.23 framework and Health Canada’s Lists of Permitted Food Additives for food-contact materials. Australia and New Zealand apply FSANZ Standard 1.4.3, which has its own permitted substance lists that don’t simply inherit FDA clearances. For barrier laminates with EVOH or metallised layers, you may need separate migration testing and a market-specific DoC even when FDA compliance is already documented. The cost of a single accredited migration test at a lab such as SGS or Intertek typically runs in the range of USD 800–1,800 per test method, depending on the simulant matrix required.
Specification Notes for Brand Partners #
When you brief us on a project involving barrier or functional materials, the two most critical inputs are: (1) the destination markets and (2) the intended food or non-food contact classification. Without both, we cannot confirm whether the substrate and coating combination in your specification is legally shippable to your retail customer.
The most common gap in incoming briefs is the absence of a DoC chain from the upstream film or foil supplier. If you’re sourcing substrate independently and asking us to convert or print, we need the DoC to cover each layer — not just the outer film. Missing DoC documentation is the single most common cause of sample iteration delays on compliance-sensitive jobs. Providing it at brief stage eliminates one full sample round.
Our standard pre-production compliance check runs 5–7 working days for known materials. For new substrate or coating combinations that require migration testing under ASTM F1306 or EU 10/2011 simulant protocols, allow 3–4 additional weeks for external lab results before sampling commences.
Frequently Asked Questions #
What documentation do we need to prove EU food-contact compliance for a barrier laminate?
At minimum: a Declaration of Compliance (DoC) for each functional layer referencing EU 10/2011 and, where applicable, EU 1935/2004; a substance identity statement confirming no SVHC above 0.1% w/w under REACH; and migration test results using the correct food simulants defined in Annex III of EU 10/2011. For complex laminates with more than three layers, we also request the laminate stack diagram mapped to each DoC.
Does FSC certification affect the regulatory compliance status of paper-based barrier materials?
FSC certification covers chain of custody for forest-sourced fibre — it has no bearing on food-contact compliance or chemical migration limits. A barrier-coated paperboard can be FSC-certified and still fail EU 10/2011 migration testing if the coating chemistry is non-compliant. The two qualification tracks run in parallel and neither substitutes for the other.
Our barrier film has FDA 21 CFR clearance — can we ship it to the EU without additional testing?
It depends on the specific film construction and the substances present. FDA clearance and EU 10/2011 compliance use different positive lists and different test protocols. Some substances permitted under FDA 21 CFR are not on the EU positive list at all. If your converter has issued a DoC against EU 10/2011 specifically, that document is what matters — not the FDA reference. We always ask for both when a job ships to multiple territories.
What is the OML for food-contact plastics under Chinese GB standards?
Under GB 5009.156-2016, the total migration limit is 10 mg/dm² — numerically equivalent to the EU OML when expressed per surface area, but test conditions differ. China mandates specific simulants aligned with GB 31604 test methods, which are not identical to EU simulant protocols. A migration test conducted for EU compliance may not be directly accepted by Chinese regulators without re-testing.
How often do barrier material compliance requirements change, and how do we stay current?
Frequently enough that annual reviews are the minimum. The ECHA SVHC candidate list updates twice per year. EU 10/2011 has been amended multiple times since its 2011 adoption, most recently under Commission Regulation EU 2023/1442. PPWR updates are introducing recyclability and recycled-content thresholds that will affect barrier laminate design choices by 2028. Our practice is annual compliance re-screening for all active barrier material suppliers on our approved vendor list, with an out-of-cycle review triggered by any confirmed ECHA or FDA regulatory action.
Planning a packaging project? Contact our team to request a complimentary specification review and sample quote.
The adhesive layer point is where we’ve burned the most time — we qualified a BOPET/foil laminate for a snack SKU shipping into Germany, cleared OTR at 0.8 cc/m²/day, then failed EU 10/2011 review because the polyurethane adhesive contained a restricted amine that sat right at the SML threshold under test conditions above 40°C. Reformulating mid-tooling added 11 weeks to launch. The performance spec and the compliance spec don’t talk to each other by default, someone has to force that conversation early.
The adhesive layer point is where we’ve burned time — ran into exactly this on a 12-mic BOPET/PE laminate destined for a German retailer last year, where the adhesive system tested clean for OML but flagged on SML for a listed amine at 0.09 mg/kg against a 0.01 mg/kg limit. Reformulation pushed our launch by 11 weeks.
Watch the 60 mg/dm² OML expression — it’s not interchangeable with the 10 mg/kg figure, and we’ve had third-party labs default to the wrong one depending on how the test request was written, which invalidated two migration certificates before we caught the pattern.
The PFAS piece is where we’ve gotten burned — had a metallised OPP structure fully validated against EU 10/2011 in Q3 2023, then REACH SVHC candidate list updated four months later and we were back to square one with the laminate supplier in Dongguan.