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Avoid costly mistakes with the new Machinery Regulation: Learn what changes from 2027 onward, which requirements apply, and how to make your processes legally compliant.
You develop, manufacture, or distribute machinery. Then the Machinery Regulation directly affects you. And sooner than many think.
Already published in June 2023: Regulation (EU) 2023/1230 will apply to the placing of machinery on the market from January 20, 2027, replacing Machinery Directive 2006/42/EC.
The problem: Many companies are still working with outdated processes. And this is exactly where risks arise. Incorrect documentation, missing proof, or unclear responsibilities can quickly become expensive.
The Machinery Regulation is a binding set of rules established by the European Union for machinery safety and related products.
It was adopted by the European Parliament and the Council in June 2023 and published in July 2023. Its goal is to align machinery safety with the current state of the art and better address new types of risks. This includes areas such as data-driven systems, hardware and software, autonomous machinery, and artificial intelligence. The regulation applies directly across the entire EU. This means it is immediately applicable and does not need to be transposed into national law first.
The Machinery Regulation affects a wide range of industries. Wherever machinery is developed, modified, or placed on the market, the new requirements apply. It is especially relevant for:
The regulation will apply to machinery placed on the market from January 20, 2027 onward. This date is critical: All machinery products introduced to the market from that point onward must comply with the requirements of the regulation.
In practical terms, this means that development, documentation, and conformity processes must be adapted, and existing workflows need to be reviewed. Manufacturers must also ensure that all requirements are fully met.
Important: Machinery placed on the market before this date will still fall under the previous regulations. For new products, however, the new regulation will clearly become the standard.
The new European Machinery Regulation introduces several significant changes. Many of them affect not only technology, but processes above all.
Manufacturers must be able to prove that a machine complies with the essential health and safety requirements.
This includes the technical documentation and the corresponding conformity assessment procedure. Depending on the product, a declaration of conformity and CE marking are also required.
The regulation responds to developments such as autonomous machinery and artificial intelligence.
This leads to new requirements for cybersecurity, software updates, and safety across all interfaces. Changes to hardware and software are also subject to stricter regulation.
One key change: Operating instructions no longer have to be provided exclusively in paper form. At first glance, this sounds like a simple improvement. Lower printing costs. Faster updates. Easier distribution.
In practice, however, it creates a new requirement: You must ensure that documentation is always available, complete, and clearly assigned.
In concrete terms, this means:
There is also one important point: Upon request, the documentation must still be able to be provided in paper form.
Practical Example:A company provides its operating instructions exclusively online. After an update, a new version is uploaded. The old version is overwritten.
Problem:A customer is still using the older machine and needs exactly that version of the manual. It is no longer available.
Consequence:Lack of traceability. Increased liability risk.
This is exactly where it becomes clear: Digital documentation reduces effort — but only if it is properly organized. The more documents become digitally enriched and computer-based, the more important a clear data structure becomes.
The conformity assessment procedure is being expanded. Especially for high-risk machinery listed in Annex III, stricter testing requirements apply.
This includes extended testing obligations, the involvement of external bodies, and a complete and correctly documented EU declaration of conformity.
Many companies underestimate the impact of the new Machinery Regulation. The biggest risks do not come from technology. They come from incorrect processes.
Here are the four most common mistakes — and why they can cost significant time and money in serious cases.
Many companies still operate according to the logic of the previous Machinery Directive.
The problem: These processes often no longer meet the new requirements of the Machinery Regulation, especially regarding documentation and responsibilities.
Example:A machinery manufacturer continues using existing templates for declarations of conformity. However, these templates no longer fully cover the new regulatory requirements. During an inspection, important information is missing.
Consequence:The machine cannot be placed on the market. Projects are delayed.
The declaration of conformity is a central document. Nevertheless, it is often underestimated.
Typical issues include multiple versions circulating at the same time, information being partially or completely missing, documents becoming impossible to locate, or no clear assignment to specific machines being visible.
Example:The development department is working with an older version of the EU declaration of conformity. Meanwhile, the sales department is already using an updated version. Both versions are being used in parallel.
Consequence:Inconsistent data. In the worst case, the wrong version is used.
The European Commission requires clear evidence and documentation. These records must be complete and available at all times. In reality, however, documents are often spread across different systems, files are not version-controlled, and approvals cannot be traced.
Example:A market surveillance authority requests documentation for a machine. The documents are distributed across several departments. It takes days to compile everything.
Consequence:Loss of time. Uncertainty. In the worst case, doubts arise — along with damage to trust and brand reputation.
The new regulation introduces clear requirements. These include cybersecurity, software modifications, and the electronic provision of documentation.
Example:A company provides its operating instructions online. However, there is no clear structure indicating which version is current or who has access to it.
Consequence:Lack of traceability. Increased risk during inspections.
The biggest leverage point is not individual documents. It is your processes.
First, you need clarity about which machines and related products are affected. Especially in the case of partly completed machinery or safety components, it is worth taking a close look at the annexes.
After that, documentation becomes critical.
Technical documentation, declarations of conformity, annexes, and supporting records must be organized properly. And above all: they must be quickly accessible.
The conformity assessment procedure is just as important. It must be clearly defined and implemented consistently across the company.
At this point, it becomes obvious why many companies struggle.
Because the more data is generated, the harder it becomes to maintain oversight.
With the new regulation, the requirements for traceability and documentation increase significantly.
At the same time, the amount of data continues to grow: technical documents, file versions, approvals, proof of conformity, and more. Without a clear structure, chaos quickly emerges.
And this is exactly what companies are reporting in practice. Many say that the lack of a central repository leads to uncertainty, duplicate work, and errors.
The risk: You lose time. And in the worst case, compliance itself.
A DAM system is software that allows you to manage all your files centrally. This means:All images, documents, technical files, and supporting records are stored in one place.
Why is this relevant for the Machinery Regulation?
You must be able to prove at any time which version is valid, which related documents have been approved, and where specific data has been used.
With a centralized solution, you avoid exactly the problems described above.
You can find any file within seconds. You work with clearly defined versions. And you ensure that everyone involved is working from the same information.
A platform like 4ALLPORTAL goes one step further: It connects content, product information, and master data within a single system. This creates clearer processes and reduces coordination effort. Especially when dealing with the complex requirements of the Machinery Regulation, that quickly becomes a decisive advantage.
The Machinery Regulation is an EU-wide framework governing the safety of machinery and its placement on the market. Die Maschinenrichtlinie wird durch die neue Verordnung abgelöst.
It applies from January 20, 2027 onward.
The Machinery Directive will be replaced by the new regulation.
All machinery products, as well as partly completed machinery and safety components.
Violations can result in machinery not being allowed to be placed on the market or being required to be withdrawn from the market.
The Machinery Regulation brings more than just new rules. It changes how you work with machinery, data, and processes.
From January 2027 onward, compliance will become mandatory. Companies that are not prepared by then risk delays in placing products on the market, unnecessary costs, and a wide range of operational issues.
The biggest challenges do not lie in individual requirements. They lie in day-to-day implementation: clean documentation, clear processes, and reliable data.
This is exactly where the difference between merely meeting obligations and achieving real progress becomes clear.
If you establish the right structures early on, you reduce effort, avoid mistakes, and gain speed.
And for that, you need one thing above all: order in your data. A centralized solution like 4ALLPORTAL helps you achieve exactly that. You maintain oversight and work with reliable information. The Machinery Regulation is an opportunity to make your processes more efficient and secure.
Dominic Vieregge
Director Service Operations
The 4ALLPORTAL is a true powerhouse that eases the daily workload for your employees. Let me show you how to unleash this potential in your own business.
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