All regulations
EU · IN FORCE

Built for EUDR.

Prove your palm oil supply is deforestation-free since 2020 — with plot-level geolocation, verified concession data, and a defensible due diligence statement.

For traders, processors, refineries, and brands shipping to or sourcing from the EU.

The regulation

What EUDR actually requires.

EUDR requires operators placing palm oil (and other forest-risk commodities) on the EU market to prove three things: the product is deforestation-free since 31 December 2020, it was produced in accordance with country-of-origin laws, and the operator has conducted due diligence to verify both.

    01

    Deforestation-free since 31 December 2020 — verified via geolocation.

    02

    Legal in country of origin — verified via local-law compliance.

    03

    Due diligence statement — DDS submitted with shipment.

From requirement to evidence

Four pieces of evidence, built from your supply chain.

Geometrack produces the structured evidence that EUDR requires — verified plot geolocation, deforestation analysis tied to the cut-off date, country-of-origin legality records, and a complete due diligence dossier.

Verified plot-level geolocation

Smallholder, plantation, and concession polygons mapped, verified, and tied to your supplier records — including the 79% of smallholder lands that typically lack legal polygons.

Powered by: Traceability to Plantation Polygon Dataset · Smallholder Legalization Support

Deforestation analysis from the cut-off

Land-use change analysis traced back to 31 December 2020, verified against multiple independent satellite sources — not just one alert system.

Powered by: NDPE Monitoring · Deforestation & Peat Conversion Dataset

Country-of-origin legality

Land tenure documentation, STDB facilitation, and concession legality verification — the legal proof EUDR requires alongside deforestation-free claims.

Powered by: Smallholder Legalization Support · Ownership Mapping

Submission-ready DDS pack

A complete due diligence dossier — risk assessment, mitigation measures, supplier engagement records — formatted for EUDR submission and defensible under audit.

Powered by: EUDR Gap Check · Helpdesk Platform · Evidence & Field Investigation

What's at stake

Enforcement begins 30 December 2026.

Large and medium operators must comply with EUDR from 30 December 2026. Micro and small operators (outside the timber sector) follow from 30 June 2027. Non-compliance means shipments can be detained, fined, or excluded from the EU market.

What teams miss

Five gaps that block EUDR readiness.

    01

    Smallholder polygons missing or unverified.

    02

    Self-declared geolocation without independent verification.

    03

    Deforestation analysis from only one satellite source.

    04

    Country-of-origin legality incomplete.

    05

    DDS dossier formatted as report, not evidence pack.

Where are your EUDR gaps?

Bring your supplier list — we'll show you which mills, smallholders, and concessions need work, and the timeline to close each gap.