The EU’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) puts a carbon price on many carbon‑intensive imports into the EU from 1 January 2026, based on their embedded emissions. It applies mainly to SMEs importing into or exporting to EU value chains. In 2026, your priority is to confirm authorised CBAM declarant arrangements and start collecting product‑level emissions data.
This guide is for:
What this guide covers
This guide explains CBAM in plain language for SMEs that import into, or export to, the EU in 2026 and beyond. It focuses on what CBAM is, who it hits, how the 2026 regime works, and the practical steps small and mid‑sized businesses must take to stay compliant while protecting margins.
The EU Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) is a climate policy that imposes a carbon price on certain imported goods, so they face a similar carbon cost to products made inside the EU under the EU Emissions Trading System (EU ETS). Its main goal is to prevent “carbon leakage”, where production moves to countries with weaker climate rules, and to encourage cleaner production globally by aligning trade and climate policy.
CBAM currently targets sectors with high embedded emissions, such as iron and steel, aluminium, cement, fertilisers, electricity, hydrogen, and some downstream products, with the scope expected to expand over time. For SMEs in these value chains, CBAM effectively turns carbon performance into a hard trade condition rather than a soft sustainability preference.
From 1 January 2026, CBAM moves from a reporting‑only regime to a paid regime where authorised CBAM declarants must buy and surrender CBAM certificates for covered imports. For SMEs, this is the first year you must budget for carbon costs, not just file emissions reports.
From 2023–2025, CBAM has been in a transitional phase in which importers report embedded emissions for in‑scope goods without paying a carbon charge. From 1 January 2026, CBAM moves into its definitive phase: imports of covered goods are only allowed via authorised CBAM declarants and will carry a carbon cost linked to their embedded emissions.
In many cases, certificate liabilities for 2026 imports are finalised and paid in 2027 once emissions are verified and benchmarks confirmed, meaning 2026 is the first year in which businesses must forecast, accrue, and explain CBAM‑related costs in their budgets, even if cash settlement occurs later.
On 1 January 2026, financial obligations under CBAM begin, and only authorised declarants may import covered goods into the EU.
Key changes SMEs need to understand include:
SMEs that import more than 50 tonnes of CBAM goods per year, or that expect to, must apply for authorised CBAM declarant (ACD) status in the CBAM Registry before covered goods arrive in 2026. The process is handled via the EU’s online CBAM portal, and national competent authorities review basic information, including company details, EORI number, financial standing, and internal controls for emissions data.
While there is no formal “last day” to apply, authorities recommend applying well ahead of the first 2026 shipment so customs can automatically validate your ACD status and the 50‑tonne threshold at the time of import. SMEs that rely on indirect customs representatives should confirm contractually that the representative holds ACD status and clarify who is responsible for data, declarations, and any penalties.
CBAM directly affects EU‑based importers of in‑scope goods, because they must register as authorised CBAM declarants (or work with one), file declarations, and manage certificates. However, non‑EU exporters and upstream manufacturers—including SMEs in India and other manufacturing hubs—are indirectly affected because their EU customers will demand high‑quality emissions data and low‑carbon products.
For SMEs, the most exposed profiles are:
The 50‑tonne threshold means many very small importers are exempt from CBAM reporting and certificate obligations for now, but it is not a permanent “get‑out” for growing SMEs. Once your annual imports of a CBAM product exceed 50 tonnes per importer, you are in the full regime for that year.
Recent CBAM “Omnibus” simplification reforms introduced a mass‑based de minimis limit that is crucial for SMEs. Imports of CBAM goods up to 50 tonnes per importer per year are now exempt from CBAM rules (with some exceptions for hydrogen and electricity), replacing the older value‑based de minimis.
Edge case – crossing the threshold mid‑year: If your imports of a CBAM product exceed 50 tonnes partway through the year, you move into the full CBAM regime for that year and must have authorised declarant arrangements and data ready, not just from the date you cross the line.
For micro‑SMEs that only ship a few pallets of CBAM goods, this can mean no formal CBAM reporting or payments; for fast‑growing SMEs, it means the difference between “light‑touch” and “full‑on compliance” can be crossed quickly.
The 50‑tonne de minimis is calculated per legal entity and per calendar year, not per shipment, and in practice, customs will track this at importer‑ID (EORI) level across all EU entry points.
For most Annex I materials (iron and steel, aluminium, fertilisers, cement), imports of less than 50 tonnes per importer per year are exempt from CBAM reporting and certificate obligations, but electricity and hydrogen are explicitly excluded and remain fully in scope regardless of volume.
Authorities are also strengthening anti‑circumvention rules to discourage strategies such as routing goods through multiple small intermediaries to stay below the threshold.
In practice, CBAM is a repeatable workflow for each CBAM product, not a one‑off project. An authorised CBAM declarant imports the goods, calculates embedded emissions, purchases certificates, files an annual declaration, and maintains documentation for audits. For SMEs, the day‑to‑day experience is mostly about data and coordination rather than policy design.
Match your imported goods’ CN codes and product descriptions with the EU’s CBAM lists for iron and steel, aluminium, cement, fertilisers, electricity, hydrogen, and covered downstream goods.
Aggregate expected annual tonnes of CBAM goods per product per year and per importer; if you stay below 50 tonnes, you may be exempt from core CBAM obligations for that product.
Either apply for authorised CBAM declarant status via the CBAM Registry or appoint an indirect customs representative who has this status, making sure you apply by the relevant 2026 deadlines and understand the grace periods.
Request embedded emissions data from non‑EU suppliers, following CBAM methodologies and templates; where allowed, use default values, but be aware they are intentionally conservative and often higher than actual emissions.
For each CBAM product, calculate emissions × applicable share of EU ETS price, minus any recognised carbon price already paid at origin, to estimate certificates needed and budget impacts.
File your CBAM declaration via the Registry (first due in 2027 for 2026 imports), surrender certificates by the deadline, and retain documentation for audits.
For an SME exporter in India or elsewhere, the focus is on being “CBAM‑ready” for EU buyers.
From the definitive phase, CBAM requires that embedded emissions used in annual declarations are independently verified by accredited verifiers, with simplified options only for very small installations or low‑risk cases defined in implementing acts.
Default values remain available as a backup but are intentionally conservative; overreliance on them can make products appear significantly more carbon‑intensive than they really are and therefore more expensive for EU buyers once CBAM costs are factored in.
CBAM’s definitive phase makes data the critical bottleneck for SMEs. Importers and exporters will need to produce and exchange structured information that can withstand regulatory scrutiny.
At a minimum, SMEs should be ready with:
If primary data is not yet available, SMEs should work with EU partners to determine whether CBAM default values can be used temporarily and what that would mean for competitiveness, as default values often assume relatively high emissions.
CBAM costs depend mainly on the embedded emissions of your product, the applicable EU ETS carbon price, and any effective carbon price already paid in the origin country. The example below is illustrative only and uses rounded numbers to show order of magnitude, not actual future prices.
|
Product (example) |
Annual imports (tonnes) |
Embedded emissions (tCO₂/tonne) |
Total embedded emissions (tCO₂) |
Assumed EU ETS price (€/tCO₂, example) |
Credited carbon price at origin (€/tCO₂, example) |
CBAM certificates needed (tCO₂) |
Illustrative CBAM cost (€) |
Timing notes |
|
Steel profiles |
1,000 |
2.0 |
2,000 |
80 |
0 |
2,000 |
160,000 |
Emissions in 2026; declaration and payment typically in 2027. |
|
Aluminium sheets |
300 |
8.0 |
2,400 |
80 |
20 |
1,800 |
144,000 |
Part of the liability may be refined once benchmarks and verification are confirmed. |
For SMEs, even a single high‑emissions product line can quickly add a six‑figure euro exposure once volumes and carbon prices scale.
Over 2026–2034, free EU ETS allowances for sectors covered by CBAM are gradually phased out, while CBAM exposure on imports increases, aligning the effective carbon price on domestic and imported goods. CBAM certificate prices mirror the average EU ETS price over a defined period (often quarterly), and future benchmarks for emissions intensity will influence how “efficient” or “high‑carbon” a given installation looks in the CBAM calculation, which means SMEs that invest early in lower‑carbon processes can lock in a structural cost advantage as benchmarks tighten.
SMEs face several practical risks if they treat CBAM as a “big company only” issue. Understanding these risks early allows for targeted preparation.
Common risks and mitigations include:
Risk 1: Data gaps and default values
Risk 2: Commercial displacement
Risk 3: Operational disruption at customs
Risk 4: Cost shock and budgeting gaps
SME leaders can use a simple, action‑oriented checklist to turn CBAM from an abstract risk into a manageable project.
Over the next 3–12 months, aim to:
A clear comparison helps SMEs understand why 2026 is a turning point.
|
Aspect |
Transitional phase (2023–2025) |
Definitive phase (from 2026) |
|
Period |
1 October 2023 – 31 December 2025 |
From 1 January 2026 onward |
|
Main obligation |
Report embedded emissions for in‑scope imports |
Report embedded emissions and buy/surrender CBAM certificates |
|
Financial impact |
No CBAM payment, informational only |
Direct carbon‑linked cost based on embedded emissions and EU carbon price |
|
Who can import |
Registered CBAM reporters under transitional rules |
Only authorised CBAM declarants (or via them) for in‑scope goods |
|
Reporting frequency |
Quarterly CBAM reports |
Annual CBAM declarations, with ongoing certificate management during the year |
|
Typical SME impact |
Learning phase: data mapping, methodology set‑up |
Compliance phase: financial planning, stronger data requirements, higher audit expectations |
The table content is simplified to highlight practical differences for SMEs and should be checked against the latest official CBAM guidance before making implementation decisions.
Zero Circle acts as a CBAM‑readiness partner for SMEs by turning scattered carbon and trade data into a structured, auditable workflow. The focus is on cutting time to compliance, reducing reliance on default values, and keeping documentation export‑ready for customs and auditors.
For SMEs in and outside the EU, CBAM in 2026 is less about abstract climate policy and more about day‑to‑day trade: customs clearance, contracts, pricing, and the ability to prove each product's true carbon intensity. Those that map their CBAM‑exposed flows, secure authorised declarant arrangements, invest in robust emissions data, and run early cost simulations will be best placed to avoid disruption, control certificate spend, and win business from less prepared rivals as CBAM tightens through 2034.
CBAM applies if your components fall under in‑scope CN codes for covered materials, not just because you export to the EU.
The importer is the entity bringing goods into the EU, while the authorised CBAM declarant is the entity registered to file CBAM declarations and manage certificates for those imports.
CBAM is a border mechanism for imports, whereas the EU ETS is a cap‑and‑trade system for emissions within the EU.
For EU importers, ignoring CBAM can lead to penalties, blocked imports, and serious customs delays.
Non‑EU SMEs should treat CBAM as a mandatory trade requirement for EU‑bound products in covered sectors, not as a voluntary sustainability initiative.
CBAM is likely to expand to more sectors and deeper supply‑chain stages over time, although the exact scope and dates are still evolving.