European Parliament Pushes for Stronger Crackdown on Unsafe E-Commerce Imports

By
EU

The European Parliament has recently adopted a resolution demanding faster enforcement and stronger sanctions against non‑EU online marketplaces that repeatedly breach EU law. The move marks a turning point in the regulation of cross‑border e‑commerce. 

This pressure comes after a scandal in France involving unsafe and inappropriate products sold via a major non‑EU platform. MEPs called that incident a “serious breach of EU law” and emphasized the need for decisive action. 

What Parliament Is Asking For

The resolution lays out several concrete demands:

  • Allow the temporary suspension of platforms that commit repeated, serious, or systemic violations, not just as a last resort but as a proactive enforcement measure. 
  • Provide significant financial and operational support to customs and market surveillance authorities across EU member states, enabling them to better detect and block non-compliant goods.
  • Accelerate the implementation of the revised Union Customs Code (UCC), including reforms to customs duty exemptions, such as the removal of the low‑value parcel exemption under €150. 
  • Introduce a harmonized EU‑level handling fee to cover supervisory costs for small parcels from outside the EU. 

The combined effect of these demands is clear: the era of easy, low‑cost, unregulated parcel imports that undermine safety, compliance, and fair competition may be drawing to a close.

The Drivers Behind the Push

The trigger was a high-profile case in France, involving safety violations on a non-EU marketplace, but the concerns go deeper. MEPs point to systemic issues: an overwhelming influx of non‑compliant small parcels, undervalued goods to avoid duties, unsafe or counterfeit products, and an unfair competitive advantage for non‑EU platforms over European retailers. 

Moreover, the sheer volume is staggering. EU customs authorities have reportedly had to handle billions of parcels under the current low‑value exemption, many of which pass through with minimal checks. 

In response, lawmakers are calling for resources, better tools, including digital monitoring, and stronger legal accountability. 

What This Means for E‑commerce Businesses

For legitimate European retailers, brands, and marketplaces, these developments could level the playing field. The upcoming regulatory changes and stricter customs controls may reduce unfair competition from non‑EU platforms that relied on loopholes to undercut prices.

However, compliance requirements will rise too. Sellers will increasingly need to ensure:

  • Accurate product metadata and compliance documentation to meet safety, labeling, and regulatory standards.
  • Transparent logistics and full visibility into supply‑chain origin, as customs scrutiny and documentation requirements intensify.
  • Proper VAT and customs handling, especially on cross-border sales coming from outside the EU.

This shift places a premium on quality product data, standardized content, and efficient content management processes, areas where structured catalog and feed providers play an essential role.

What Retailers and Marketplaces Should Do Now

Given the direction of regulatory change, proactive preparation is key. Businesses selling cross‑border or sourcing from outside the EU should:

  • Review their supply‑chain compliance and documentation practices today, especially for product safety, origin, and labeling.
  • Ensure their product catalogs are complete, accurate, and include all required regulatory and logistics data.
  • Prepare for customs and VAT changes, as well as potentially higher handling costs, when selling goods imported into the EU.
  • Align with compliance‑ready infrastructure partners and data syndication services to avoid disruptions as enforcement becomes more stringent.

A Turning Point for Europe’s Digital Market

The European Parliament’s resolution sends a clear message: compliance, safety, and fair competition matter. With reforms on the horizon, non‑EU platforms that fail to comply with regulations may face suspension or more stringent sanctions. At the same time, compliant businesses will gain clarity and a fairer environment.

As enforcement ramps up, the firms best positioned are those that combine transparent supply chains, high‑quality product data, robust compliance practices, and a readiness for a new, more regulated era of European e‑commerce.

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