Choosing the right level of granularity for your business
As sustainability regulations like the EU's ESPR begin rolling out, businesses must decide how granular their Digital Product Passports (DPPs) need to be. Get it right, and you streamline compliance while delivering traceability and value. Get it wrong, and you risk excessive cost, poor data quality, or being left behind.
To help, weโve developed a tiered pricing and strategy model that aligns with four levels of product granularity โ from Stock Keeping Unit (SKU) to Customer Order level. Hereโs a step-by-step guide to shaping your DPP strategy.
Before choosing your DPP level, ask:
Are you aiming for basic compliance or leadership in transparency?
Do your customers ask for traceability?
How complex is your supply chain?
What are the cost and data capture implications?
Use the table below to understand the pros, cons, and cost of each level:
Example: One passport for all rolls of White Fabric.
Best for: Businesses new to DPPs, seeking a low-effort entry point.
โ Pros:
Easiest and fastest way to start
Low operational complexity
Good for static stock items
โ ๏ธ Cons:
Doesnโt reflect product variations
May not meet future compliance detail
Limited downstream visibility
Example: One passport for each new roll of White Fabric.
Best for: Suppliers needing basic chain-of-custody traceability.
โ Pros:
Stronger traceability
Establishes data from a specific batch
Enables transparency without full item-level tracking
โ ๏ธ Cons:
Risk if downstream data isnโt captured
Still too coarse for high-compliance scenarios
Example: One passport for every 1000 T-shirts made.
Best for: Midstream manufacturers with stable batch production.
โ Pros:
Affordable and scalable
Suitable for growing compliance needs
Enables consumer engagement (QR code access, story, materials)
A balance of visibility and simplicity
โ ๏ธ Cons:
Not ideal for premium products or customisation
Some transparency limitations for end buyers
Example: One passport for each T-shirt.
Best for: Brands offering individual transparency and customer-facing data.
โ Pros:
Highest traceability
Enables consumer engagement (QR code access, story, materials)
Fully ready for upcoming EU regulation detail
โ ๏ธ Cons:
Higher data input needs
Less suited for low-value/high-volume products
Start simple, then move to detail. For example:
Phase 1: Start with SKU or Batch level (Bands A or B)
Phase 2: Move to Manufacturer Batch (Band C) as data improves
Phase 3: Scale to Customer Order level (Band D) for premium or regulated lines
Not all products need the same passport level.
Use SKU-batch level for bulk fabrics, Batch-level for internal supply flows, and Order-level for final goods or exports to the EU.
At Pathway, we help businesses choose the right level and grow over time โ without overcommitting early.
๐ Book a free DPP strategy session
๐ See our MVP demo and sample passports
๐ Email us to find our more