Packgine automates producer registration, fee calculation, and compliance reporting across every US state EPR law and EU PPWR β so your team stays compliant without building an internal regulatory function.
Whether you're a scaling e-commerce brand or a global enterprise, Packgine automates multi-state EPR fee calculations, filing deadlines, and compliance reporting so your team can focus on growth.
Trusted by DTC startups and Fortune 500 brands Β· Deploys in days Β· Shopify, Amazon & ERP integrations
Trusted by compliance teams from startup to enterprise
No other SME tool covers multi-state EPR with built-in PPWR readiness for EU expansion.
Automatically calculate EPR fees and track filing deadlines across California (SB 54), Maine, Oregon, Colorado, and every new state as legislation passes.
Planning to sell into the EU? Get ahead of the August 2026 PPWR enforcement. Pre-assess your packaging portfolio for recyclability, recycled content, and labelling requirements.
Calculate Scope 1, 2, and 3 emissions per SKU. Generate verified carbon reports aligned with GHG Protocol and SEC climate disclosure rules.
Score every packaging component across 50+ US regional recycling infrastructures. Meet state-level recycled content requirements with location-specific accuracy.
Automated alerts when inventory levels cross tonnage thresholds that trigger new EPR reporting obligations. Pre-filled state filings save hours of manual work.
Connect your Shopify store or Amazon Seller account. Auto-import product and sales data to keep compliance calculations up to date as you scale across states.
Compliance Is Hard
Brands and suppliers struggle to track compliance with data scattered across ERPs, spreadsheets, and siloed tools. The result? Sustainability teams waste time on data admin instead of reducing risk.
From lean e-commerce teams to enterprise compliance departments: one platform that scales with your business.
California's SB 54 can impose fines up to $50,000 per day per violation. Whether you manage 50 SKUs or 50,000, Packgine automates fee calculations and filing deadlines across every active state.
Go live in under a week with guided onboarding and pre-built templates. Unlike rigid enterprise tools that require 6-month implementations, Packgine grows with you, from your first state to full nationwide coverage.
Model how pending legislation in New York, Washington, and Illinois will impact your entire portfolio. Run cost scenarios across SKUs and jurisdictions to make data-driven packaging decisions.
Expanding into the EU? Packgine covers PPWR requirements alongside US EPR. One platform, one team, both sides of the Atlantic, whether you're a DTC brand or a multinational enterprise.
"We built Packgine to be the single source of truth that connects procurement, sustainability, and compliance functions. Our platform transforms compliance from a burdensome obligation into a strategic advantage.
The same powerful compliance engine, tailored to how your team works β from early-stage e-commerce to enterprise-wide operations.
E-Commerce & DTC Brands
1β3 EPR states Β· 50β500 SKUs Β· Lean teams
Multi-State & EU Readiness
Up to 10 states Β· 500β1,000 SKUs Β· Growing teams
Global Brands & Enterprises
$50M+ revenue Β· 1,000β50,000+ SKUs Β· Dedicated compliance teams
Content reviewed by Kevin Kai Wong, Managing Partner at gCurv Technologies
Packgine is an AI-powered SaaS platform by gCurv Technologies that automates global packaging compliance for EPR (Extended Producer Responsibility), PPWR (EU Packaging and Packaging Waste Regulation), and ESG reporting. It provides instant lifecycle analytics, automated regulatory reporting, and AI-driven recommendations to help brands reduce costs, meet climate goals, and navigate international packaging regulations. The platform serves as a centralized dashboard for procurement, sustainability, and compliance teams.
Packgine includes automated EPR registration and compliance reporting across US states and EU markets, PPWR regulatory tracking with proactive alerts before laws change, AI-powered material swap recommendations from a database of over 25,000 packaging materials, instant lifecycle analysis and carbon footprint calculation per SKU, scenario planning to forecast cost and compliance impacts of material or supplier changes, packaging portfolio heatmaps showing recyclability scores across all products, and cross-functional team collaboration with shared real-time data.
Packaging covers anything used to contain, protect, handle, deliver, or present a product, across primary (consumer-facing), secondary (multipack/retail), and tertiary (pallet wrap, transport) layers. Most state EPR laws also cover paper products and food service ware; pallets and reusable industrial packaging are usually scoped differently or exempt. Learn more: Ecommerce Shipping Packaging in Scope: When Mailers, Void Fill, and Dunnage Count and Food Contact Packaging Exemptions: What Is and Isn't Exempt Under PPWR and US State EPR.
EPR is a regulatory framework that makes manufacturers and brand owners financially responsible for the collection, recycling, and disposal of their packaging after consumer use. Producers must typically register with a Producer Responsibility Organization (PRO), report detailed packaging data (materials, weights, recyclability), and pay fees based on the amount and type of packaging they place on the market. EPR laws are now active in multiple US states and throughout the EU. Learn more: What is EPR? Extended Producer Responsibility.
Seven states have active packaging EPR programs in 2026: California (SB 54), Oregon (Recycling Modernization Act), Colorado, Maine (LD 1541), Minnesota, Maryland, and Washington. Each has its own producer definition, fee schedule, and reporting calendar, so most multi-state CPGs face overlapping but non-identical obligations. Learn more: Seven US States with Active Packaging EPR in 2026: A Status Map.
Producers of single-use packaging and plastic food service ware sold or distributed in California must register with CalRecycle through Circular Action Alliance. "Producer" generally means the brand owner, or the importer if the brand owner has no US presence. Companies under $1M in gross sales of covered material may qualify for limited exemptions, but registration is still typically required. Learn more: California SB 54: May 31 Producer Reporting Deadline.
CalRecycle can assess civil penalties of up to $50,000 per day, per violation, for failures to register, report, or pay fees. In practice, late or inaccurate Annual Supply Reports and Source Reduction Reports are the most common triggers, and penalties stack across SKUs and reporting periods.
It depends on the program. California SB 54 generally excludes durable, reusable transport packaging like pallets and IBC totes, but single-use transport films, void fill, and corrugated outer cases are in scope. EU PPWR covers transport packaging more broadly and will require recyclability and recycled content for many formats by 2030. Learn more: Reusable Transport Packaging Under EPR: Pallets, IBCs, Totes, and Crates.
A PRO is a non-profit that producers fund and join to meet their EPR obligations collectively. It handles registration, fee collection, recycling investment, and reporting on behalf of its members, replacing what would otherwise be a state-by-state direct relationship. Learn more: What a PRO Does in EPR: Roles, Responsibilities, and Producer Obligations.
Circular Action Alliance (CAA) is the PRO running packaging EPR programs in California, Colorado, Minnesota, Maryland, and several other US states. Most national CPG producers will work with CAA across multiple state programs through a single membership structure. Learn more: Circular Action Alliance: The PRO Running Most US Packaging EPR Programs.
The PPWR entered into force in February 2025 and its core obligations begin applying August 12, 2026, including harmonization of national EPR schemes. Recyclability grading (A/B/C), recycled content minimums, empty space limits, and restrictions on certain single-use formats phase in between 2026 and 2030. By 2030, all packaging on the EU market must be recyclable and meet minimum recycled content thresholds for plastic. Packaging waste reduction targets are 5% by 2030, 10% by 2035, and 15% by 2040 compared to 2018 baselines. Packgine tracks all PPWR deadlines and sends proactive alerts. Learn more: PPWR vs PPWD: Why a Regulation Replaced the Directive and What Actually Changes.
Yes. Any company placing packaged goods on the EU market, including US brands selling through DTC, marketplaces, or EU distributors, is subject to PPWR. US producers without an EU establishment generally need an authorized representative in each member state of sale. Learn more: PPWR for US Brands: When EU Packaging Rules Apply to a US-Headquartered Company.
EPR is a fee paid to fund collection and recycling of the packaging you put on market, calculated on weight and material recyclability. A Plastic Packaging Tax (e.g. UK PPT) is a per-tonne tax on plastic packaging that contains less than a defined recycled content threshold. They co-exist: a UK plastic bottle can owe both pEPR fees and PPT. Learn more: UK Plastic Packaging Tax Mechanics: Rate, Scope, and Who Actually Pays.
Packgine automates the full EPR compliance workflow: producer registration tracking, packaging data collection and validation, fee calculation based on current rate schedules, report generation in jurisdiction-specific formats, and deadline monitoring with proactive alerts. Instead of managing compliance manually across spreadsheets, teams use a single dashboard that covers all obligated jurisdictions.
Packgine offers three pricing tiers: Standard at $1,200 per quarter (5 SKUs, quarterly compliance reports, basic compliance features), Growth at $4,500 per quarter (20 SKUs, analytics, advanced compliance), and Enterprise at custom pricing (advanced analytics, scenario planning, custom integration, premium support). All plans include a free trial with no setup fees. Annual billing discounts are available.
From emerging DTC brands to Fortune 500 enterprises, Packgine powers multi-state EPR compliance for brands that can't afford to get it wrong.
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