About

Compliance information shouldn't need a consultant to translate it.

Why Conformery exists

Product compliance rules are real and public: they live in official directives, regulations and government guidance pages. In practice they are scattered across long PDFs, cross-referenced across several instruments, and often re-explained, loosely and inconsistently, on consultancy blogs written to sell a service.

Makers, importers and small sellers deserve a straight answer before they commit to tooling, testing or a container of stock: what actually applies to this product, in this market, and where that comes from. That is the whole idea behind the requirements checker and the regulation guides.

The no-fabrication principle

Every regulatory fact rendered on Conformery comes from a dataset entry that carries an official source link. If we could not independently verify something against an official text, it is labelled as unverified rather than presented as settled fact. We would rather show you less than show you something wrong.

VerifiedUnverified — check sourceEvery fact on the site carries one of these two labels, next to a link to the source itself.

What Conformery is not

  1. 01

    Not legal advice

    Conformery maps official regulations to your product type and links every fact to its source. It does not replace a lawyer, and it cannot give you a binding interpretation of how a rule applies to your specific product.

  2. 02

    Not a test lab

    Conformery tells you which standards and tests typically apply. It does not run EMC, safety or chemical tests itself; you still need an accredited lab or your own qualified test setup.

  3. 03

    Not a notified body

    Where a regulation requires third-party conformity assessment, Conformery tells you so and flags it in the dossier. Only an actual notified or approved body can carry out that assessment and issue the certificate.

Written and maintained by The Conformery Team. Questions or corrections: hello@conformery.com or the contact page.