Coffee & the EU Deforestation Regulation

The EUDR takes effect December 30, 2026. Every shipment of coffee into the EU after that date requires a Due Diligence Statement with plot-level geolocation. This page covers what's required, where compliance is hardest, and which origins are filing compliant DDS today.

Countdown to enforcement
EU Deforestation Regulation begins
December 30, 2026
237
days remaining

What EUDR requires for coffee

In-scope products. EUDR Annex I covers cattle, cocoa, coffee, oil palm, rubber, soya, and wood — plus derived products like leather, chocolate, and palm oil derivatives. Coffee falls within scope; HS codes covered for this commodity include 0901.11.00.

Geolocation requirement. Every plot of land where the coffee was produced must have GPS coordinates submitted with the Due Diligence Statement. For smallholder origins this is operationally hard — many farms have never been geo-tagged. Aggregators must collect coordinates from every supplier in their chain.

Cut-off date: December 31, 2020. Production on land deforested after that date is non-compliant. Land cleared before December 31, 2020 is grandfathered. Satellite imagery from Sentinel-2, Landsat, and proprietary monitoring services (Trase, Earthsight, World Resources Institute) is being used to verify claims at scale.

Due Diligence Statement (DDS). Every shipment requires a DDS submitted through the EU Commission's TRACES.NT system before goods clear EU customs. The statement covers product origin, quantity, supplier identity, geolocation data, and a risk assessment. The operator placing the goods on the market is legally responsible — penalties cannot be passed to the supplier.

Penalties. Non-compliance carries penalties of up to 4% of the operator's annual EU turnover, full confiscation of the shipment, and exclusion from public procurement and EU funding for up to 12 months. Repeat offenses compound.

Origin compliance landscape

Top 10 coffee-producing countries by share of global production, with the EU's published or anticipated EUDR risk classification. High-risk classifications trigger enhanced due diligence requirements; standard and low classifications follow the baseline DDS process.

RankCountryShare %EUDR risk tierCompliance notes
1Brazil38standardCECAFE traceability; large-estate model favors compliance
2Vietnam16standardSmallholder fragmentation; Robusta supply chain consolidation in progress
3Colombia7.7low
4Indonesia6.4standard
5Ethiopia4.7standardCooperative model with limited GPS infrastructure; significant compliance lift
6Uganda3.6standard
7Honduras3.3low
8India3.3low
9Peru2.5low
10Mexico2.2standard
Additional documentation
EUDR Due Diligence Statement: Plot-level geolocation, deforestation-free declaration

Compliant alternative origins

Origins where producers and exporters are already filing compliant Due Diligence Statements, with structured geolocation data and verified deforestation-free supply chains. If your current sourcing is exposed, these are starting points.

OriginCapacity (MT/yr)Compliance postureNotes
Colombia840,000Active DDS filingsFNC farmer registry with GPS coordinates
Honduras450,000Active DDS filingsIHCAFE traceability; cooperative-led DDS
Peru240,000Filing capabilityJunta Nacional del Café; smallholder GPS rollout
Costa Rica85,000Active DDS filingsICAFE national registry; small-but-compliant model
Source EUDR-ready coffee suppliers

Atlas Tradex pre-qualifies suppliers against EUDR criteria — geolocation data, post-2020 land-use verification, DDS-ready documentation. Filter the directory to compliant counterparties only.

Source compliant suppliers →