1. What is the EMC Directive?
The EMC Directive 2014/30/EU ensures that electrical and electronic equipment:
- Does not generate electromagnetic interference (EMI) that disrupts other equipment
- Is sufficiently immune to electromagnetic disturbances so it works as intended
In short: your product shouldn’t disturb others, and it shouldn’t be easily disturbed itself.
This directive is mandatory for placing applicable products on the EU/EEA market.
2. Products Covered by the EMC Directive
Included
Most electrical and electronic equipment that can emit or be affected by electromagnetic disturbances, including:
- Consumer electronics
- Industrial equipment
- IT and telecom equipment
- Medical electrical equipment (EMC only; other directives also apply)
- Power supplies, controllers, inverters
- LED lighting and drivers
Excluded
The EMC Directive does not apply to:
- Radio equipment (covered by the RED 2014/53/EU)
- Aeronautical products
- Custom-built evaluation kits for professionals
- Equipment with no potential to generate or be affected by EMI
If your product uses radio transmission, EMC is handled under the Radio Equipment Directive, not separately.
3. Essential Requirements (Core Legal Obligations)
Your product must meet two essential EMC requirements:
1. Emissions
Electromagnetic disturbances generated must not exceed levels allowing other equipment to operate normally.
2. Immunity
The product must have adequate resistance to electromagnetic disturbances expected in its intended environment.
There are no fixed limits in the directive itself — compliance is demonstrated using harmonised standards.
4. Harmonised Standards (How Compliance Is Proven)
Using harmonised EN standards gives a presumption of conformity.
Common EMC Standards
| Product Type | Typical Standards |
| IT / Multimedia | EN 55032, EN 55035 |
| Industrial | EN 61000-6-2, EN 61000-6-4 |
| Residential / Commercial | EN 61000-6-1, EN 61000-6-3 |
| Lighting | EN 55015, EN 61547 |
| Power Supplies | EN 61204-3 |
Immunity Tests Often Include
- Electrostatic discharge (ESD)
- Radiated RF immunity
- Conducted RF immunity
- EFT/burst
- Surge
- Voltage dips and interruptions
You may use non-harmonised standards, but then you must justify compliance in more detail.
5. Conformity Assessment Procedure
The EMC Directive uses Module A: Internal Production Control.
What this means
- Self-declaration is allowed
- No notified body is required (in most cases)
- Manufacturer is fully responsible for compliance
Typical Steps
- Identify applicable EMC standards
- Perform EMC testing (internal or external lab)
- Address failures (design fixes, filters, shielding, layout)
- Compile Technical Documentation
- Draft EU Declaration of Conformity
- Affix CE marking
6. EMC Testing Requirements
Where Testing Can Be Done
- EMC test lab
- In-house test facility (must be technically justified)
Testing Must Reflect
- Worst-case operating modes
- Intended environment
- Final production configuration
Testing prototypes is allowed, but production must remain equivalent.
7. Technical Documentation (Technical File)
Must be available to authorities for 10 years after last product is placed on the market.
Required Contents
- Product description and intended use
- Design and manufacturing drawings
- EMC risk assessment
- Test plans and test reports
- List of applied standards
- Justification if standards were not fully applied
- Instructions and warnings
No fixed format, but it must clearly demonstrate compliance.
8. EU Declaration of Conformity (DoC)
A legally binding document stating compliance.
Must Include
- Manufacturer name and address
- Product identification
- Reference to EMC Directive 2014/30/EU
- Applied standards
- Signature and date
The DoC must be:
- Supplied with the product or
- Made available online (with reference in instructions)
9. CE Marking Rules
- CE marking must be visible, legible, and indelible
- Minimum height: 5 mm
- Must be affixed before placing on the EU market
- Cannot imply approval by authorities
No notified body number is used for EMC.
10. Responsibilities by Economic Operator
Manufacturer
- Ensure compliance
- Perform testing
- Create documentation
- Issue DoC
- Affix CE marking
Importer
- Verify compliance and documentation
- Ensure manufacturer details are present
- Keep DoC available
Distributor
- Ensure CE marking and instructions are present
- Not place non-compliant products on the market
11. Common EMC Compliance Pitfalls
- Testing only one operating mode
- Ignoring immunity because emissions passed
- Using outdated standards
- Design changes after testing
- Poor cable selection during testing
- Missing risk assessment documentation
12. Relationship to Other EU Directives
Most products require multiple directives, for example:
| Directive | Purpose |
| LVD 2014/35/EU | Electrical safety |
| RED 2014/53/EU | Radio equipment |
| RoHS 2011/65/EU | Hazardous substances |
| Machinery Regulation | Mechanical safety |
Each directive requires separate justification, but one CE mark.
13. Enforcement and Penalties
Market surveillance authorities may:
- Request technical documentation
- Test products independently
- Issue recalls or sales bans
- Impose fines (varies by country)
Lack of documentation is itself a violation—even if the product “works fine.”
14. Practical Compliance Checklist
✔ Identify applicable EMC standards
✔ Perform emissions and immunity testing
✔ Document results and risk assessment
✔ Fix failures and retest if needed
✔ Prepare Technical File
✔ Draft EU Declaration of Conformity
✔ CE marking
✔ Maintain records for 10 years

