2025年1月14日
2024 was a year of significant policy developments and legislative changes by the EU legislator to improve consumer protection and redress. In addition to the new General Product Safety Regulation (GPSR), which came into force on 13 December 2024, and the growing importance of the EU class action regime under the Representative Actions Directive, a big milestone for consumer redress was recently the adoption of the new EU Product Liability Directive 2024/2853 on 23 October 2024. It will replace the existing Product Liability Directive 85/374/EEC from nearly 40 years ago.
The New Product Liability Directive aims to modernize the product liability rules to bring them up to speed with advancing technologies, the circular economy business models and globalization of supply chains. It is also designed to remove obstacles for consumers wanting to seek compensation in respect of defective products. The New Product Liability Directive therefore changes the current product liability risk landscape for companies selling products in the EU significantly. Below we provide an overview of what companies selling products into the EU should know about the new product liability rules and how they can prepare in 2025 to mitigate increasing product liability risks.
The New Product Liability Directive is relevant to all companies placing products on the EU market.
It sets out the liability framework for when companies are liable for damage caused by a defect in their product. A product is defective when it does not provide the level of safety that a person is entitled to expect. Importantly, the test remains one of strict liability, meaning that consumers do not have to prove negligence or fault of the company. Product liability only requires that:
One of the main aims of the New Product Liability Directive is to modernize the product liability rules and adapt them to the digital age. The manufacture and sale of products has changed considerably since the Old Product Liability Directive from 1985.
The New Product Liability Directive therefore includes the following amendments:
A further aim of the New Product Liability Directive is to remove obstacles of consumer redress. The New Directive therefore makes it significantly easier for claimants to bring product liability claims for defective products.
The New Product Liability Directive includes the following amendments:
The European Commission published the proposal for the AI Liability Directive in September 2022 as part of a package with the AI Act and the New Product Liability Directive. While the latter two have since been adopted, the legislative process for the AI Liability Directive has stalled and the proposal was withdrawn by the European Commission in February 2025. The Commission is expected to propose legislation on software liability in its place.
The New EU Product Liability Directive introduces a more claimant-friendly strict product liability regime in the EU and reduces legal certainty for businesses. This can have a significant impact on companies selling products into the EU as it will make it easier for consumers to bring claims for defective products, particularly where there are evidential difficulties caused by complex scientific and technological concepts. A significant number of product liability cases involve an assessment of highly complex scientific and technological evidence in respect of the product in question. It is therefore difficult to see many circumstances where the new presumptions will not apply but it will be considered on a case by case basis. Accordingly, it remains to be seen how the European courts will apply the new presumptions and if, in practice, it results in a reversal (or at the very least significant easing) of the burden of proof and therefore significantly increases product liability risks for companies placing products on the EU market.
The new PLD does not apply to companies selling products on the UK market and currently the UK's strict liability regime is governed by the Consumer Protection Act 1987 (CPA). There is also now the new Product Safety and Metrology Bill which permits the UK to adopt or diverge from updated EU rules and regulations. We therefore need to wait to see whether the UK introduces legislation (likely by way of amendments to the CPA) which mirrors the new PLD.
The New Product Liability Directive will have to be implemented by Member States by 9 December 2026. The old Product Liability Directive 85/237/EEC will continue to apply to products already on the market by then. Companies should use the time to do the following:
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