TL;DR: Compliance failures on drawer and sliding boxes are almost always documentation failures — the physical box passes, but the paperwork trail needed for customs clearance or retailer onboarding is incomplete.
TL;DR: In our experience, missing migration test data under EU Regulation No. 10/2011 or FDA 21 CFR §175.300 is the single most common reason a food-adjacent packaging order gets held at the EU or US border, and a full test package takes 6–8 weeks to prepare from scratch.
What Non-Compliance Actually Looks Like on a Drawer Box Order #
The symptoms are specific. A shipment arrives at Rotterdam or Long Beach, and one of three things happens: customs requests a Declaration of Compliance that references an obsolete standard; the retailer’s onboarding portal rejects the product because the FSC chain-of-custody certificate number on file doesn’t match the supplier; or a brand’s internal legal team flags that the ink supplier has not provided a REACH SVHCs statement dated within the current calendar year.
None of these failures are about the box itself. The greyboard is within spec. The print register is within ±0.2mm. The slide friction is tuned correctly. The problem exists entirely in the compliance document set.
Map each symptom to its root cause before deciding where to invest remediation effort:
| Symptom at Customs / Retailer | Most Likely Root Cause | Secondary Root Cause |
|---|---|---|
| Declaration of Compliance rejected | References superseded standard (e.g., old EU Directive 94/62/EC text) | Missing signatory authority or incorrect issuing entity |
| FSC certificate mismatch | Supplier certificate expired or re-numbered after audit | CoC number not updated in retailer vendor portal |
| Ink/coating REACH query | SVHCs list updated after initial submission (REACH Annex XVII) | No confirmation that ink lot number matches formulation tested |
| Food-contact material hold | Migration test absent or conducted at wrong temperature/time combination | Test substrate doesn’t match actual contact surface |
| California Prop 65 warning query | No threshold testing for listed compounds in ink or adhesive | Warning label omitted from packaging destined for CA distribution |
The Root Cause Teams Consistently Misattribute: Food-Contact Migration vs. Surface-Contact Assumption #
This is the diagnostic error we encounter most often in new project briefs. A brand owner briefs us on a drawer box for a tea canister, a supplement pouch, or a cosmetic product with a paper sachet insert. The inner contents are not loose food, but there is a paper or foil liner sitting against the box interior. The brand’s compliance team classifies the box as “indirect food contact” or “secondary packaging” and assumes migration testing does not apply.
Under EU Regulation No. 10/2011 on plastic materials and articles intended to contact food — and its parallel for paper, EN 645:1994 for cold water extract — the classification depends on functional barrier analysis, not on whether the packaging is called “primary” or “secondary.” If the inner liner is not a functional barrier certified to block migration to the concentration thresholds in the regulation (10 mg/dm² overall migration limit for most plastic-coated surfaces; specific migration limits vary by substance per Annex I of 10/2011), the outer drawer box must itself be tested.
The same logic applies under FDA 21 CFR §175.300 for resinous and polymeric coatings. The regulation does not provide a blanket exemption for secondary packaging when the liner is thin, permeable, or unsealed at the edges — and many paper liners used in supplement and tea drawer boxes are exactly that.
Measurement method: request from your ink and coating suppliers a full extractables and migrants report run at 70°C for 2 hours and 40°C for 10 days (the standard EU worst-case conditions for ambient/chilled dry goods contact). The threshold to confirm safe compliance is overall migration ≤ 10 mg/dm² and all specific migrants below their individual limits in Regulation No. 10/2011 Annex I. If your coating supplier cannot provide test data at these conditions — not just at room temperature — the data is functionally unusable for EU import.
We log every food-adjacent project through what we call our FC-02 contact classification form, which captures the liner permeability rating and the intended market before we select any internal coating or adhesive. It was introduced after a 2023 supplement project where the inner sachet was assumed to be a functional barrier but was a 38 gsm uncoated tissue — not a barrier at all.
Corrective Actions Ranked by Impact and Feasibility #
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Rebuild the Declaration of Compliance to current standard language. Reference the current EU Packaging and Packaging Waste Regulation (PPWR, 2024 revision in force) and not legacy 94/62/EC text. For US-bound product, align to current ASTM D5639 classification language. This costs nothing except one internal review hour and clears roughly 60% of customs documentation holds in our experience.
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Request dated SVHCs confirmation letters from all ink and adhesive suppliers, tied to lot numbers. REACH Annex XVII is updated regularly — the current Candidate List (as of 2024) contains over 240 substances. A blanket “REACH compliant” letter with no date or substance list is not auditable. Suppliers should confirm against the Candidate List date applicable at the time of production.
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Verify FSC chain-of-custody certificate validity before every production run, not just at onboarding. Certificates are issued under FSC-STD-40-004 and are valid for 5 years but subject to annual audits. If a supplier fails an interim audit, the certificate number can be suspended. Our procurement team runs a live check against the FSC certificate database at PO issuance — not at project kick-off.
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Commission food-contact migration testing if any inner liner is below 60 gsm uncoated or below 15 µm coated film. Below these thresholds, functional barrier claims are difficult to substantiate without empirical data. Testing through an accredited lab (ISO/IEC 17025 accreditation required for EU submissions) takes 3–4 weeks for ambient-condition migrants and up to 8 weeks for elevated-temperature testing.
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For California distribution, commission a Prop 65 threshold analysis on all UV-curable ink formulations. This is a more thorough remediation and will require your ink supplier’s full formulation disclosure. The cost is real but so is the exposure: Prop 65 private enforcement actions are active in the packaging sector, and supplement and personal care brands are a documented target category.
Prevention — What to Specify Upfront to Avoid This Failure Mode #
At PO stage, your supplier brief should include: destination market (EU / US / CA / AU), end product category, inner liner specification (material, GSM, coating status), and a statement on whether the product makes any skin or oral contact. These four data points determine which migration standards apply before a single gram of greyboard is cut.
Request three documents from your packaging supplier before production begins: a current Declaration of Compliance citing the applicable regulation by current version; a dated REACH SVHCs statement referencing the current Candidate List; and, for food-adjacent products, a migration test report from an ISO/IEC 17025 accredited laboratory. Any supplier who cannot produce all three within 10 working days of request should be treated as an unqualified compliance risk, not a cost-saving opportunity.
Specification Notes for Brand Partners #
When you brief us on a drawer box or sliding box project, the compliance path is determined by three inputs we need before we can issue a sample specification: the destination market, the inner contents category, and the liner or insert material you’re planning to use. Without those three, we can’t confirm whether an internal coating is required or which ink series is appropriate.
The brief gap that causes the most sample iterations is late confirmation of inner liner material. Brands frequently approve a box prototype using a placeholder liner and then substitute it in production with a thinner or different-porosity material. If that substitution changes the functional barrier status of the inner surface, the coating and potentially the ink system need to change — and that’s a new sample cycle, typically adding 10–15 working days.
Our standard sample lead time for a new drawer box with compliance documentation is 18–22 working days from confirmed brief. If food-contact migration testing is required, the documentation package adds 4–8 weeks after sample approval. We can run sampling in parallel with migration testing on pre-approved construction specifications, which saves time when the structural design is already locked.
What documents should I request from a Chinese packaging supplier to clear EU customs?
At minimum: a Declaration of Compliance referencing current PPWR/94/62/EC requirements, a REACH SVHCs statement dated to the current Candidate List, an FSC or PEFC chain-of-custody certificate number (verifiable in the public registry), and a migration test report if the product has any food-adjacent contact surface. For packaging containing inks, a Nestlé Guidance compliance statement or EuPIA Good Manufacturing Practice declaration is increasingly requested by EU retailers even when not legally mandated.
Does FSC certification apply to the drawer box itself or to the paper supplier?
Both, and the chain has to connect. FSC certification operates through chain-of-custody under FSC-STD-40-004 — your packaging supplier must hold an active CoC certificate, and they must be able to trace the board they used to a certified forest source. A supplier who shows you their certificate but cannot provide the certificate number of their board mill is not FSC-compliant in any meaningful audit sense. The public FSC certificate search tool at info.fsc.org lets you verify any certificate number in under two minutes.
If my product isn’t food, do I still need migration testing?
It depends on the product category and destination market. For cosmetics in the EU, Regulation EC 1223/2009 doesn’t mandate packaging migration testing the same way food law does, but if the product contacts the packaging surface (e.g., a loose powder compact in a sliding tray), your safety assessor may require extractables data anyway. For children’s products, EN 71-3:2019 sets migration limits for certain elements in surface coatings that apply regardless of food contact status. Don’t assume the absence of food means the absence of testing obligations — it depends on what’s in the box.
Our supplier says they’re “ISO 9001 certified” — does that cover regulatory compliance for packaging?
ISO 9001:2015 is a quality management system standard. It confirms that a factory has documented processes for consistent production. It says nothing about whether those processes produce packaging that meets FDA 21 CFR, EU 10/2011, REACH, or any product-specific regulation. A factory can be ISO 9001 certified and still produce packaging that fails a migration test. The two are unrelated. What you need alongside ISO 9001 is evidence of regulatory-specific testing and documentation — not just a QMS certificate.
Planning a packaging project? Contact our team to request a complimentary specification review and sample quote.
The CoC number mismatch issue burned us badly on a Q4 2023 rollout — our supplier had gone through an FSC audit in September and their certificate got re-numbered, but our vendor portal at Target still had the old SCS-COC-007XXX format number sitting in the system. 46 SKUs held for 11 days during peak fulfillment.
The FSC certificate re-numbering issue trips us up more than the article implies — when our Guangdong board supplier went through their annual FSC audit in Q3 last year, they got a new CoC number mid-production run, which meant the certificates on two separate POs referenced different numbers even though both were technically valid at time of printing. Retailers won’t accept that explanation; they want a single matching number across all documents for that SKU, so we’ve started requiring suppliers to flag any pending audit windows before we confirm order placement.
The FSC certificate mismatch issue cost us a full reprint on a 15,000-unit watch box run last spring — supplier had been re-audited in February and the CoC number changed, nobody flagged it before we submitted to the retailer portal, and we absorbed about $2,200 in expediting fees to get corrected documentation plus a partial rebox because the outer label had the old certificate reference printed on it.