According to trans.info, European hauliers and supply chain professionals must prepare for a wave of binding regulatory changes entering into force across the EU beginning January 1, 2026 — with key deadlines concentrated in the first half of the year. These measures span vehicle safety, driver monitoring, dangerous goods transport, customs digitization, and cross-border documentation — collectively reshaping operational requirements for carriers, forwarders, and shippers engaged in intra-EU and third-country logistics.
Advanced Safety Systems for Trucks and Buses
Under the next phase of the General Safety Regulation (GSR), from July 7, 2026, all newly manufactured trucks must be equipped with advanced emergency braking systems (AEB). This extends an existing mandate for passenger cars and light commercial vehicles. Simultaneously, all newly homologated buses and trucks will require event data recorders (EDR) — commonly known as “black boxes” — starting in 2026; full coverage across all vehicles in these categories takes effect in 2029. The source states the aim is to improve road safety and level the playing field in road transport. Experts point out that some companies that do not prepare their fleet for the new technical requirements may have significant difficulties in continuing operations. Installation demands not only hardware procurement but also staff training and internal procedural updates. Non-compliance risks include vehicle detention during foreign inspections.
Tachograph Mandate for Vans
From July 1, 2026, vans weighing 2.5–3.5 tons performing international transport of goods must use second-generation smart tachographs (G2V2) and comply with working time regulations equivalent to those for truck drivers. The source notes this imposes major organizational changes — especially for smaller enterprises. Each tachograph costs about 1,000 euros (excluding installation), and few vans are factory-adapted for G2V2 integration. Carriers must issue driver and company cards, train staff, update internal procedures, and acquire compatible data-reading software. Companies are advised to analyze fleets now, reserve installation slots at authorized service centers, and plan training for drivers and office staff responsible for route planning and working time control.
Tightened ADR Regulations for Dangerous Goods
New rules under delegated directive (EU) 2025/1801 enter force on November 2, 2025, with full implementation by June 24, 2026. They introduce a unified checklist, a three-tier risk classification system, and extend legal responsibility across the entire logistics chain — from shippers and tank operators to recipients. The source defines:
- Category I (high risk): includes leaks of hazardous substances, missing documentation or ADR driver’s certificate, or events threatening death, serious injury, or major environmental damage — requiring immediate vehicle stoppage;
- Category II (medium risk): covers violations needing immediate correction (e.g., malfunctioning fire extinguishers or incorrect markings) and events posing risk of injury or environmental damage;
- Category III (low risk): formal deficiencies or minor errors correctable later without safety impact.
ADR documents — including training certificates and written instructions — must be physically present in the vehicle cabin. Failure may trigger administrative or criminal sanctions, including vehicle detention. Companies must verify whether they now meet thresholds requiring appointment of an ADR advisor.
Digitization of EKMT Permits and Customs Updates
From January 1, 2026, EKMT permits and carnets will be issued exclusively in electronic form. Paper documents are phased out, necessitating ERP and TMS system integration and staff retraining. Electronic carnets enable faster inspections and reduce documentation errors — but depend on full digitization and compatibility with the EKMT platform.
Also effective July 1, 2026, a flat customs duty of 3 euros applies to all non-EU shipments valued up to 150 euros, aimed at regulating cross-border e-commerce. Concurrently, the Import Control System 2 (ICS2) becomes fully operational. While Bulgaria, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Germany, Greece, Malta, Netherlands, Portugal, Slovenia, and Sweden implemented ICS2 on September 1, 2025, countries granting derogations — including Austria, Belgium, Croatia, Finland, France, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Poland, Romania, Slovakia, and Spain — postponed mandatory use until end of 2025.
ICS2 requires submission of an Entry Summary Declaration (ESD) before each delivery, containing buyer/seller details, receipt/delivery locations, a six-digit HS code, and goods description. Declarations must be filed at least one hour before arrival at the EU border. Carriers — responsible for obtaining complete data from supply chain partners — face fines of up to 5,000 euros per violation. The system aims to enhance threat detection, border security, and information exchange between carriers and customs authorities.
Eco-Zones and Broader Context
The Netherlands introduced nationwide exemptions in zero-emission and ecological zones effective January 1, 2026, extending validity periods — though further details were not provided in the source. For supply chain professionals, these cumulative changes signal intensified compliance complexity, especially for SMEs managing mixed fleets and multi-jurisdictional shipments. Unlike earlier EU digital initiatives (e.g., the 2023 rollout of the Digital Transport and Logistics Forum), the 2026 package combines hardware mandates, real-time data obligations, and expanded liability — raising both capital and operational expenditure. Industry-wide, similar digitization and safety trends are evident: the U.S. FMCSA’s 2023 rule mandating ELDs for medium-duty vehicles echoes the EU’s tachograph expansion, while Canada’s recent ADR-aligned amendments reflect parallel global harmonization efforts. Practically, professionals must audit fleet composition, map documentation flows, validate partner readiness, and allocate budget for hardware, software, and training — treating compliance not as a one-time project but as an embedded layer of daily operations.
Source: Trans.INFO
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










