EU Ecolabel for Indoor / outdoor paints and varnishes — What It Means, How to Verify | ProductGuru
·
The EU Ecolabel certification for indoor / outdoor paints and varnishes is issued and maintained by European Commission - EU Ecolabel. This page explains what the badge means, what it does NOT cover, how to verify a real one, and how it compares with adjacent schemes. It is an index entry built from the issuer's public materials — we do not issue or audit certifications ourselves.
What this certification means
For indoor / outdoor paints and varnishes, the EU Ecolabel scheme defines specific environmental, chemical and/or performance criteria that a product must meet to display the label. The exact criteria are published by the issuing body in a public standard document. Some criteria are pass/fail thresholds (such as restricted substances), others are tier-based scores (such as energy efficiency classes).
Reference: Commission Decision (EU) 2014/312.
Who issues it
The certification is issued and maintained by European Commission - EU Ecolabel. This is the authoritative body for the scheme; their public site is the only source we treat as canonical for current criteria, fees, and the list of certified products.
How to verify the badge is real
To check whether a product genuinely carries this certification:
- Look for the official mark on the packaging or product. Most schemes publish an image of the exact logo and any required identifier (licence number, certificate number, country code) on their website.
- Look the product up in the issuer's public register: https://environment.ec.europa.eu/topics/circular-economy/eu-ecolabel/products-and-services-available-eu-ecolabel_en
- Check the certificate is current — most certifications have a multi-year renewal cycle. An expired certificate is no longer valid even if the badge is still printed on packaging that was made earlier.
- If in doubt, contact the issuer directly. They are the only party who can confirm the status of a specific certificate.
How this badge appears on packaging
You may see this certification referenced as any of:
low voc paintecolabel paintwater-based painteco paintnatural paint
What gets certified, what does not
EU Ecolabel is scoped to the criteria published in the standard document linked above. What it covers: the specific environmental, safety, or performance tests defined for indoor / outdoor paints and varnishes. What it does not cover: claims outside that scope — for example, ethical labour, carbon footprint, circular packaging, or animal welfare, unless those topics are explicitly named in the criteria.
Products in this category
We don't have enough catalogue items that explicitly reference EU Ecolabel for indoor / outdoor paints and varnishes in our index yet. You can browse the indoor / outdoor paints and varnishes category and then verify each candidate against the issuer's register linked at the bottom of this page.
Comparison with adjacent certifications
If you are evaluating EU Ecolabel you may also encounter these schemes covering overlapping or competing scope:
- Nordic Ecolabel (Nordic Swan)
- Blue Angel (Germany)
Each scheme has its own criteria, scope and renewal cycle. The presence of one badge does not imply absence of the others, and vice versa.
What this certification does NOT guarantee
It is worth being explicit: EU Ecolabel does not guarantee the lowest possible price or the highest performance. EU Ecolabel sets environmental criteria that must be met; products outside the scheme can also perform well environmentally but have not been certified.
This is not a flaw of the scheme — every certification is scoped — but readers regularly over-read a badge. If a topic matters to you and the scheme is silent on it, look for a complementary certification or ask the brand directly.
Sources: European Commission - EU Ecolabel · last fetched 2026-07-19 · See also: Commission Decision (EU) 2014/312
We index publicly listed certifications; we do not issue them. Information here reflects what the issuing body has published on its public site as of 2026-07-19. Always verify directly with the issuer for current status — criteria, fees and validity can change.
- How to Verify a Rainforest Alliance Certification Is Genuine
- How to Verify a GMP Certified Supplement Certification Is Genuine
- France Product Certification Requirements for Children's Products
- Slovenia Product Certification Requirements for Pet Food
- IP69K Certification: Cost and Timeline
- What Does the Blue Angel German Eco-Label Actually Mean?