Let's be honest: post-Brexit compliance marking has been one of the most confusing things UK importers have had to navigate in years. UKCA, CE, extensions, exemptions — the goalposts have moved repeatedly and the guidance from government hasn't always been crystal clear. If you've been importing physical products into Great Britain and wondering whether your CE-marked goods are still legal to sell, or what on earth a UKCA mark actually involves, you're in exactly the right place.
This guide is written for UK business owners, brand founders, Amazon sellers, and procurement managers who source products from China, Vietnam, or elsewhere overseas, and need a plain-English explanation of UKCA marking — what it is, which products need it, how to get it applied to goods manufactured abroad, what it costs, and how Epic Sourcing can help you navigate it without losing your sanity or your margin.
UKCA (UK Conformity Assessed) is the product marking used in Great Britain — England, Scotland, and Wales — to show that a product meets UK technical regulations and safety standards. It replaced CE marking for most regulated product categories following the UK's departure from the European Union, and is required before regulated products can legally be placed on the GB market.
Post-Brexit, the UK created its own product safety and conformity framework that largely mirrors EU standards but operates independently. The UKCA marking regime means that if you're importing regulated products — from electrical goods and machinery to toys, PPE, and measuring instruments — into Great Britain and placing them on the GB market, you are now the UK Responsible Person. That's a legal designation with real obligations: you must ensure the product meets applicable UK technical regulations, hold a technical file, affix the correct marking, and be reachable by UK enforcement authorities including Trading Standards and the Office for Product Safety and Standards (OPSS).
For UK businesses sourcing from overseas — particularly from China and Vietnam, where the vast majority of manufactured goods imported into the UK originate — the practical challenge is ensuring that your supplier either already has UKCA-compliant documentation and testing, or that you can arrange the necessary conformity assessment, technical file compilation, and marking application before your goods arrive at Felixstowe or Southampton. Getting this wrong isn't just a paperwork headache; non-compliant products can be stopped at the border, recalled from shelves, and can expose you to civil liability if a consumer is harmed.
The honest answer is: structurally, not a huge amount — but the administrative and commercial implications are significant. Both marks signal conformity with technical regulations. Both require a Declaration of Conformity and, for many product types, third-party assessment by an approved body. The differences lie in jurisdiction, recognition, and the bodies involved.
| Feature | CE Marking | UKCA Marking |
|---|---|---|
| Jurisdiction | EU + Northern Ireland | Great Britain (England, Scotland, Wales) |
| Governing body | European Commission / EU Notified Bodies | UK Government / UK Approved Bodies (UKABs) |
| Declaration of Conformity | EU DoC required | UK DoC required (separate document) |
| Third-party assessment | EU Notified Body | UK Approved Body (UKAB) |
| Mutual recognition | Accepted across all 27 EU states + NI | Not accepted in EU market |
| UK GB market acceptance | Check current gov.uk guidance — position has evolved | Always accepted in GB |
| Responsible person | EU-based manufacturer or EU Authorised Rep | UK-based importer or UK Responsible Person |
| Exporting to the EU | CE required | UKCA not sufficient — CE still required separately |
The UK government's position on CE marking acceptance in Great Britain has been subject to multiple updates and extensions since Brexit. Always verify the current position at gov.uk/guidance/ukca-marking before making compliance decisions. This guide reflects the established framework and should be read alongside official guidance.
Not every product sold in the UK needs a conformity mark. UKCA applies to specific regulated product categories where safety and performance requirements are mandated by UK technical regulations. As a rule of thumb: if it was CE marked before Brexit, it almost certainly falls under UKCA requirements for the GB market now.
Many product types — clothing, most furniture, food-contact materials — do not carry a UKCA mark. Before importing a new product category, search the UK Product Safety Database and UK Technical Regulations to confirm which regulations apply and whether your product requires UKCA or no conformity mark at all.
If you sell products in or through Northern Ireland, the rules are different. Under the Windsor Framework, Northern Ireland continues to align with EU product safety regulations. Goods placed on the market in NI must carry CE marking — not UKCA — for regulated product categories.
Products assessed by a UK Approved Body intended for the Northern Ireland market require a UKNI marking alongside CE. If assessed by an EU Notified Body, CE alone is sufficient for NI. UKCA alone cannot be used in Northern Ireland — a significant complication for businesses selling across all parts of the UK.
The UKCA marking process follows a clear path, though complexity varies significantly by product category:
Determine which UK technical regulation(s) apply to your product. Most mirror the equivalent EU directive. Check the UK Product Safety Database and gov.uk guidance pages for your product category.
Some products allow self-declaration of conformity. Others require third-party assessment by a UK Approved Body (UKAB). Products with higher safety risk — certain electrical items, PPE, medical devices — typically require UKAB involvement.
Your product must be tested against the relevant UK designated standards. These largely mirror EN (European) standards. Your Chinese or Vietnamese manufacturer may already have test reports — check whether these cover the UK standards equivalents.
The technical file is your evidence dossier: product description, design drawings, applicable standards, test results, risk assessment, and compliance documentation. If your factory has a CE technical file, it can often be adapted for UKCA — but must reference UK regulations and UK designated standards specifically. You must be able to produce this file to UK enforcement authorities within 10 working days if requested.
The UK DoC is a formal document signed by the UK Responsible Person (usually your UK company as the importer) stating that the product complies with all applicable UK technical regulations. It must include the product description, applicable regulations, standards used, and name/address of the Responsible Person.
The UKCA mark must be affixed to the product (or its packaging) in a visible, legible, and indelible manner before the product is placed on the GB market. For goods from China, this typically means marking at the factory before export. Minimum height is 5mm unless otherwise specified.
Retain the technical file and UK Declaration of Conformity for a minimum of 10 years from the date the product is placed on the GB market. You are also obligated to cooperate with OPSS investigations and take corrective action (including recall) if a product is found to be unsafe.
UKCA marking sits within a broader framework of UK import compliance. When you're bringing regulated products through Felixstowe, Southampton, or any other UK port, you need to have several things in order:
The UK Responsible Person must be established in the UK (i.e., have a registered UK address). As a UK importer, your company will typically hold this designation. This is not just a label — it carries genuine legal liability. If a product you've imported causes harm and it's found to be non-compliant, the Responsible Person faces enforcement action from OPSS, Trading Standards, or courts. Your Chinese or Vietnamese manufacturer cannot be your UK Responsible Person — they're not UK-established.
At Epic Sourcing, we've seen importers discover mid-shipment that their factory's documentation doesn't meet UK requirements — by which point the goods are already on a container vessel bound for Felixstowe. The time to resolve this is at the specification and sampling stage, not at customs.
How much does UKCA marking actually cost? The honest answer is that it varies enormously by product category, conformity assessment route, and whether your overseas factory already has useful existing documentation.
| Cost Element | Typical Range (£) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Product testing (UK accredited lab) | £500 – £5,000+ | Lower for simple products; higher for complex electrical/medical |
| UK Approved Body assessment (if required) | £1,500 – £15,000+ | Only for certain product categories (PPE, pressure equipment, etc.) |
| Technical file preparation | £500 – £3,000 | Lower if adapting existing CE technical file |
| UKCA mark application (factory labels) | £50 – £500 | Minimal for high-volume production runs |
| UK compliance consultant | £800 – £5,000 | Advisable for first-time importers or complex products |
| Total — straightforward product (self-declaration) | £1,000 – £5,000 | Existing CE documentation adapted |
| Total — complex product (UKAB required) | £5,000 – £25,000+ | New testing, full technical file from scratch |
This is where most UK importers go wrong — they start thinking about UKCA compliance after the product is already in production. Compliance needs to start at the product specification stage. If you're placing an order with a lead time of 90 days, initiate compliance in parallel — not after goods arrive at Southampton.
The vast majority of regulated products imported into the UK come from China. An increasing number come from Vietnam, particularly in textiles, footwear, electronics assembly, and furniture. Understanding how UKCA compliance works in the context of overseas manufacturing is critical.
Most established Chinese factories manufacturing regulated products — particularly electronics, electrical equipment, and toys — will have CE certification and test reports. As a UK importer, you can often leverage this existing documentation as the foundation for UKCA compliance, but you must verify that test reports cover the same product model, reference correct UK-equivalent standards, and obtain the underlying technical file (not just the CE certificate summary).
Vietnam is an increasingly attractive sourcing destination for UK importers — partly for quality and capacity, but also because the UK-Vietnam Free Trade Agreement (UKVFTA) provides significant tariff advantages. Under UKVFTA, 65% of UK-Vietnam trade became zero-tariff immediately upon entry into force, with progressive elimination reaching 99.2% over time. For categories like textiles (12%), footwear (8–17%), and furniture (6.5%), these savings directly improve your landed cost calculation. From a UKCA perspective, Vietnam-sourced products follow the same compliance path as China-sourced goods — the obligation is determined by product category and GB market placement, not country of manufacture.
| Factor | China | Vietnam |
|---|---|---|
| UKVFTA tariff benefit | None (no UK-China FTA) | Yes — significant savings on many categories |
| CE documentation availability | Very common in regulated sectors | Growing — especially electronics assembly |
| Sea freight to UK (Felixstowe/Southampton) | ~25–35 days | ~30–38 days |
| MOQ flexibility | Excellent — very wide supplier range | Good for most categories |
| UKCA compliance support from factory | Variable — depends on export experience | Variable — use a knowledgeable sourcing agent |
At Epic Sourcing, we've been working with UK businesses to source products from China and Vietnam since our founding — and navigating UK product compliance is something we build into every project from the start. Here's how we can help:
We identify factories with existing CE/UKCA-compliant products, handle supplier negotiations, and advise on documentation requirements so you can brand and sell with confidence.
Learn more about White Label →For UK businesses developing their own product specification. We manage factory relationships end-to-end, including coordination with compliance testing labs and review of UKCA documentation before production is finalised.
Learn more about Private Label →Our full product development and sourcing service for UK brands creating genuinely original products. We manage compliance requirements from specification through to delivery, including liaising with UK compliance consultants and building your documentation framework.
Learn more about Secret Label →Already working with a Chinese or Vietnamese factory but unsure about their compliance credentials? We conduct factory audits and documentation reviews, assessing whether CE/UKCA documentation is genuine, current, and applicable to your specific product.
Learn more about Supplier Verification →Book a free 30-minute consultation with our UK team. We'll walk through your product category, existing documentation, and the most practical compliance pathway for your situation.
Book Your Free ConsultationNo obligation. We talk through your situation first.
The UK government has provided various transitional arrangements for CE marking acceptance in Great Britain since Brexit, and the position has evolved through multiple updates and extensions. The rules depend on your specific product sector and the current government guidance in force. Always check the current official guidance at gov.uk/guidance/ukca-marking for your specific product category before relying on CE marking for GB sales. Do not assume that because CE was accepted previously it is automatically accepted now — the policy continues to be reviewed.
Yes — and this is generally the most practical approach. Your Chinese factory can physically apply the UKCA mark (via labels, moulding, or printing) before export, provided all the underlying compliance work has been completed first: testing against UK designated standards, technical file compilation, and signing of the UK Declaration of Conformity by the UK Responsible Person. The factory applies the mark physically; you as the UK importer are legally responsible for the compliance claim. Never ask a factory to apply the UKCA mark without completing the required compliance steps first — this is a compliance offence.
UK Border Force and HMRC can refuse entry to goods that do not comply with UK product safety requirements. Non-compliant regulated goods can be detained, seized, and destroyed at your cost. If they make it through to the GB market and are subsequently found non-compliant by Trading Standards or the OPSS, you can face enforcement notices, mandatory recalls, civil liability claims, and potentially criminal proceedings in serious cases. The OPSS has significantly expanded its product safety enforcement activity in recent years.
It depends on the product category. Many products allow self-declaration of conformity — you assess the product against UK designated standards and sign the UK DoC without involving a third party. However, some higher-risk product categories mandate third-party assessment by a UK Approved Body (UKAB). These include certain PPE classes, pressure equipment, lifts, and specific medical device types. The applicable UK technical regulation will specify whether UKAB involvement is mandatory. A compliance specialist can advise on whether your specific product falls in the self-declaration or UKAB-required category.
Not necessarily from scratch — but you cannot simply reuse CE compliance documentation without review. UK technical regulations largely mirror EU directives, and UK designated standards closely correspond to the EN standards used for CE. In many cases, existing CE test reports and technical files can be adapted for UKCA with relatively modest effort — particularly where no EU Notified Body was involved. Key tasks: confirm test reports reference UK-equivalent standards, prepare a separate UK Declaration of Conformity referencing UK regulations, and ensure a UK-based Responsible Person is named. Where an EU Notified Body assessment was performed, a separate UK Approved Body assessment will be required for UKCA.
Epic Sourcing works with UK businesses to source products from China and Vietnam with compliance built in from day one — not bolted on at the last minute. Book a free consultation and let's talk through your product, your situation, and the most straightforward path to compliant GB market entry.
Epic Supply Chains UK Ltd • 71-75 Shelton St, London WC2H 9JQ • hello@epicsourcing.co.uk