Contact: +91 99725 24322 | 
    
        
    
		
						Menu
		
					
				
						Menu
		
					
				Quick summary: TraceX helps coffee companies in Netherlands meet EUDR requirements with automated Due Diligence Statement (DDS) generation, farm-level traceability, and deforestation risk verification.
	  The EUDR DDS for Coffee Supply Chain in the Netherlands mandates that all coffee imported or processed within the country be deforestation-free and legally produced. As one of Europe’s key coffee import and roasting hubs, Dutch operators must submit a Due Diligence Statement (DDS) with verified farm-level geolocation data by December 30, 2025. The regulation requires full traceability across origins such as Brazil, Ethiopia, and Vietnam, ensuring transparency, supplier verification, and risk assessment. For Dutch importers and roasters, adopting digital traceability platforms is critical to meet EUDR standards and maintain market access.
The EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR) is the European Union’s legislative framework to ensure that certain commodities placed on or exported from the EU market are deforestation-free and legally produced. Its goal is to halt the EU’s contribution to global forest conversion, biodiversity loss and climate change by requiring operators to trace products back to the production plot and verify that forest land was not converted after 31 December 2020.
Coffee is explicitly listed among the regulated commodities under EUDR. This means that all actors in the Dutch coffee supply chain, from importers, roasters, traders to distributors, are subject to the regulation when placing coffee (including green beans or roasted coffee) on the EU market. The inclusion reflects coffee’s strong link to deforestation, sometimes termed “embodied deforestation,” and the significant share of global coffee destined for the EU.
The Netherlands acts as a major European import and distribution hub for commodities in scope of the EUDR. It often serves as the first entry point for coffee into the EU and as a distribution platform to other EU countries. According to recent analysis, the Netherlands is among the top EU member states importing EUDR-relevant commodities. Because many Dutch companies place coffee onto the EU market first (thereby becoming “operators” under the EUDR), they bear the full responsibility for compliance traceability, due diligence, and documentation even when the origin is outside Europe.
Under EUDR, an “operator” is any entity that places a regulated product on the EU market for the first time. For coffee, this includes green beans and roasted coffee products under HS Code 0901 and others defined in Annex I. Operators must complete a due diligence system and file a “Due Diligence Statement” (DDS) before placing the product on the market. The regulation entered into force on 29 June 2023, and full application begins on 30 December 2025 (with some deadlines extended or subject to national transposition). Non-compliant products cannot legally be placed on the EU market.
For the Dutch coffee sector, this means: importers bringing green coffee beans into the Netherlands must trace them back to the farm or plot of origin, collect geolocation data, and ensure no deforestation after the cut-off date. Roasters or distributors based in the Netherlands need to verify the documentation, integrate it into their supply chain, and maintain records for audit and compliance. Even if the roasting or packaging happens elsewhere in the EU, the Dutch operator placing the coffee on the market is accountable under EUDR. Given the Netherlands’ role as a transit and processing hub, Dutch firms must ensure that upstream links (farms, cooperatives, exporters) supply the necessary traceability and legality data so that the coffee imported and distributed through the Netherlands is compliant.
Master the step-by-step process of submitting Due Diligence Statements under the new EUDR rules. 
Read the blog on filing DDS for EUDR compliance 
Explore how coffee importers and roasters in can achieve traceability, transparency, and compliance under EUDR. 
Read the full blog on EUDR Coffee Compliance 
Dutch coffee companies operate at the crossroads of global supply and EU regulation, making EUDR compliance both critical and complex. Their procurement networks stretch across multiple producing continents, Latin America, Africa, and Asia, where data consistency, traceability standards, and enforcement vary dramatically. This results in fragmented and often unreliable datasets, especially when dealing with smallholder farmers, who represent nearly 70% of global coffee production yet often lack digital record-keeping, satellite mapping, or formal land tenure documentation.
Coffee supply chains are inherently multi-layered. Beans sourced from cooperatives or exporters often pass through several intermediaries before reaching Dutch ports. Each transaction layer increases the risk of data loss or duplication, making it difficult for importers to map the full chain of custody back to the farm plot level — a non-negotiable EUDR requirement.
Most importers continue to rely on spreadsheets and email-based documentation, with minimal automation or interoperability. This creates massive administrative bottlenecks. Without digitization, validating geolocation data, verifying legal production, and submitting timely Due Diligence Statements (DDS) become near-impossible at scale. Even minor inaccuracies can trigger regulatory scrutiny or delay customs clearance.
Unlike vertically integrated commodities, coffee’s open trading structure lacks uniform data pipelines. Countries like Brazil or Vietnam have made progress with digital traceability, but smaller producers in Ethiopia or Uganda often operate outside formal systems. The inconsistency of traceability maturity across regions complicates compliance for Dutch firms sourcing from multiple origins simultaneously.
The EUDR introduces substantial financial and reputational risks. Non-compliance may lead to fines of up to 4% of EU-wide turnover, shipment rejections, and suspension of trading rights within the single market. Furthermore, consumer-facing brands risk losing credibility as sustainability and transparency become key purchase drivers across Europe.
To navigate these challenges, Dutch coffee importers and roasters must transition to interoperable digital ecosystems capable of consolidating supplier data from multiple sources, automating DDS workflows, and linking every shipment to its verified deforestation-free origin. Such systems should integrate satellite monitoring, blockchain verification, and AI-powered risk scoring to ensure continuous visibility and compliance readiness.
In essence, the Netherlands’ central role in the European coffee economy makes EUDR compliance not just a regulatory necessity but a strategic imperative. Without digital traceability and upstream transparency, the sector faces bottlenecks in customs, disrupted supply continuity, and loss of competitive edge in an increasingly regulated marketplace. By adopting data-driven compliance solutions, Dutch coffee operators can transform EUDR readiness into an opportunity for supply chain resilience, trust, and long-term sustainability leadership.
As the EUDR compliance deadline approaches, coffee companies in the Netherlands face the daunting task of consolidating traceability data from hundreds of suppliers across multiple continents. TraceX’s digital platform bridges this complexity with AI-driven, blockchain-secured automation that makes EUDR compliance seamless, scalable, and audit-ready.
Here’s how TraceX simplifies the entire Due Diligence Statement (DDS) lifecycle for coffee operators and importers:
TraceX automates the generation, validation, and submission of DDS forms in full alignment with the EU’s digital reporting system. This ensures that each coffee shipment, whether green beans, roasted, or blended, is linked to its verified farm origin, reducing manual effort and eliminating compliance delays. The system pre-validates data fields such as geolocation, legality proof, and deforestation-free evidence, ensuring readiness for audit at any time.
Each coffee batch is assigned a unique digital identity stored securely on the blockchain. This guarantees tamper-proof proof of origin from the plot level to the point of export or roasting. The immutable ledger enhances supply chain credibility, as every transaction from farmer to exporter to roaster is digitally timestamped and verifiable, preventing data manipulation or duplication.
EUDR compliance begins with farmer-level visibility. TraceX provides mobile-first tools for onboarding smallholder farmers, cooperatives, and exporters. Through GPS-based mapping, each farm’s geolocation data, ownership documentation, and cultivation details are captured and stored digitally. This feature is critical for coffee supply chains dominated by smallholders, where manual mapping has historically been a barrier to compliance.
The TraceX dashboard delivers real-time risk insights into sourcing regions highlighting deforestation exposure, legality risks, and supplier compliance gaps. These dynamic risk-scoring capabilities allow operators to prioritize monitoring efforts, verify supplier claims, and demonstrate proactive due diligence during audits. The dashboard also tracks every DDS submitted, ensuring complete visibility across the supply chain.
Consider a Dutch coffee roaster sourcing from Ethiopia and Latin America. Using TraceX, the company can integrate farm data directly from cooperatives, automate DDS creation for each shipment, and instantly generate deforestation-free origin certificates verified via blockchain. Within weeks, the roaster achieves full traceability and compliance visibility, streamlining both EU reporting and sustainability certification (e.g., Rainforest Alliance, Fairtrade).
In essence, TraceX transforms EUDR compliance from a manual, high-risk process into a transparent, data-driven workflow. By digitizing due diligence and decentralizing data validation through blockchain, it enables Dutch coffee companies to not just meet regulatory requirements but build a reputation for trust, sustainability, and responsible sourcing.
The EUDR is reshaping how the Dutch coffee industry operates, transforming compliance into a strategic differentiator rather than a bureaucratic burden. For importers, roasters, and retailers, embracing digital traceability is about more than meeting a regulation; it’s about building a resilient, transparent, and future-proof value chain.

Consumers are demanding verifiable sustainability claims. “Deforestation-free coffee” is no longer a label it’s a proof point of authenticity. Retailers and HORECA brands that can trace every bean back to origin can command loyalty and premium pricing, while reinforcing ESG credibility in sustainability-conscious markets like Germany, France, and the Netherlands.
Digital EUDR compliance aligns seamlessly with existing sustainability certifications such as Rainforest Alliance, Fairtrade, and Organic. By linking verified EUDR data like geolocation, legality, and deforestation metrics to certification reporting, Dutch roasters can reduce audit fatigue, simplify documentation, and prove climate-conscious sourcing to both regulators and consumers.
With AI-powered traceability systems, coffee operators gain data intelligence on sourcing hotspots, identifying deforestation-prone zones, legality risks, or low-compliance regions. This allows companies to diversify sourcing strategically, maintain continuity, and anticipate disruptions in volatile supply markets. In effect, EUDR compliance becomes a risk management advantage.
Competitive Edge in a Regulated Market
Early adopters of traceability and digital DDS platforms will dominate in compliance-readiness and access EU markets ahead of competitors. Transparent, data-driven operations also position Dutch roasters and traders as preferred partners for global brands seeking sustainable suppliers driving growth while others scramble to adapt.
In essence, EUDR compliance is not just about avoiding penalties; it’s about redefining leadership in ethical trade. For the Netherlands Europe’s coffee gateway aligning technology, sustainability, and compliance isn’t optional; it’s the key to shaping the next decade of responsible coffee commerce.
As the EUDR compliance deadline approaches, the Netherlands Europe’s central hub for coffee imports, roasting, and re-export stands at a pivotal crossroads. Achieving full EUDR DDS compliance isn’t just a regulatory requirement; it’s an opportunity to redefine how coffee supply chains operate with transparency, traceability, and trust at their core. By digitizing due diligence through platforms like TraceX, Dutch importers and roasters can seamlessly link farm-level data to consumer-facing proof of sustainability, ensuring every bean entering Europe is deforestation-free, legally produced, and ethically sourced.
In a market where sustainability is fast becoming a license to operate, digital EUDR compliance is not a cost, it’s a competitive advantage that strengthens brand integrity, secures market access, and future-proofs the Dutch coffee industry for 2025 and beyond.
Understand the key components of EUDR compliance and how to streamline your DDS process efficiently. 
Read the blog on EUDR Due Diligence 
Learn how AI-driven automation and intelligent workflows simplify data collection, verification, and reporting. 
Explore the blog on Agentic AI for EUDR 
Unpack the biggest hurdles faced by importers under EUDR — and how technology can turn compliance into a competitive edge. 
https://tracextech.com/eudr-compliance-importers-checklist/ 
The EUDR is a regulation by the European Union aimed at preventing deforestation-linked commodities like coffee from entering the EU market. It requires full supply chain traceability and submission of Due Diligence Statements (DDS) proving compliance.
A DDS is a formal declaration confirming that coffee imported or sold in the Netherlands is deforestation-free and legally sourced. It must include farm-level geolocation data and risk assessment documentation.
All Dutch importers, traders, roasters, and retailers handling coffee are required to comply. Both large corporations and small operators must provide DDS documentation for their supply chains.
Common difficulties include gathering farm-level data, verifying deforestation-free claims, managing multiple small-scale farmers, and manually preparing DDS documents.
TraceX digitizes the entire process of mapping coffee farms, verifying deforestation risks via satellite data, and auto-generating compliant DDS reports ready for submission.
Yes. TraceX is built for scalability and ease of use. It supports both large enterprises and smallholder networks, enabling simple data collection via mobile apps