Andrew Litchfield
Partner
Article
5
If you develop software, run an online marketplace, or manufacture anything with a digital component, the regulatory landscape just shifted. The Product Regulation and Metrology Act 2025 (the "Act") has received Royal Assent, and for the first time, UK product safety law explicitly covers "intangible components"—including software.
This is a key piece of framework legislation that gives government sweeping new powers to regulate products in ways that could fundamentally change how tech companies, online platforms, and digital-physical product manufacturers operate. The immediate question for many businesses isn't whether this will affect them, but when and how.
This is enabling legislation that creates powers rather than immediate obligations. The Act itself doesn't impose new compliance requirements on businesses today. Instead, it grants the Secretary of State broad authority to introduce specific regulations through secondary legislation, which will require parliamentary approval.
This framework approach allows for responsive, targeted regulation that can adapt to emerging technologies and evolving safety challenges without requiring primary legislation for each new development.
The Act establishes several key capabilities:
Framework powers: Secretary of State can now make product regulations covering physical products AND digital/software components. This marks a significant departure from traditional product safety frameworks that focused primarily on physical characteristics.
Enforcement toolkit: When specific regulations are made, they are able to incorporate substantial enforcement tools including:
UK-wide structure: The unified framework with devolved consent mechanisms ensures consistent approaches across England, Wales, Scotland, and Northern Ireland.
The Act's definitions signal its modern scope. "Products" explicitly include items with intangible components, while "production" encompasses manufacturing, assembly, design, engineering, packaging, and labelling. This broad interpretation ensures the framework can address complex modern products that blend physical hardware with sophisticated software systems.
This development aligns closely with parallel evolution in EU product liability law. The EU's new Product Liability Directive 2024/2853, which we analysed in depth in a recent article, similarly expands liability frameworks to encompass digital products and AI systems.
For UK businesses trading with the EU, this creates a complex compliance landscape. While the UK and EU are moving in similar directions, their specific approaches may diverge. Companies may need:
Whether physical or digital, traditional or AI-powered, businesses should start preparing for enhanced safety standards that will apply throughout product lifecycles - not just at the point of sale.
While no new compliance obligations are yet in force, prudent businesses should:
For any questions or concerns regarding the implementation of these regulatory requirements, please contact Andrew Litchfield or Natalie Barton-Howes.
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