Substance Regulations
Assess every part on your BOM against the six substances India restricts, and hold the IEC 63000-ready documentation behind the RoHS reduction the E-Waste Rules require.
India's RoHS reduction sits inside the E-Waste Rules and expects an IEC 63000 technical file. Compliance Manager assesses the parts and holds the documentation, so here is what you get.
How Z2 helps
Most of your BOM assessed against the six India RoHS substances on day one from Z2's FMD and CoC database.
Each part returned Affected, Not Affected, or Noncompliant.
Compliance status at every level of the product hierarchy.
IEC 63000-ready documentation behind every assessment.
Z2-led campaigns collect the FMDs and CoCs you're missing.
Notified when the E-Waste (Management) Rules change.
See how Z2 handles India RoHS on your BOM.
See a demoBOM assessment
Load a BOM and each component is checked against the six restricted substances at once.
IEC 63000 file
India expects the reduction backed by an IEC 63000 file, so each result carries its supporting evidence.
Where India RoHS sits
The substance restriction is one requirement within the E-Waste (Management) Rules, alongside producer registration and EPR.
One platform
India RoHS is one of 270-plus regulations Compliance Manager runs on a single BOM.
In practice
Your BOM is matched against the six India RoHS substances the moment you upload it, no wait.
One part shows its India, EU, and China status together, so one pass answers several markets.
Material disclosure tests each part against the Indian limit instead of assuming it is under.
IEC 63000 documentation sits ready per part, so a CPCB sample check never catches you out.
Status rolls up from each part to the finished product, so you release with the full picture.
Alerts flag it early when the E-Waste Rules are amended or a part's status changes on you.
Part of
automated material compliance across 270+ regulations, so RoHS, REACH, PFAS, conflict minerals, and more stay audit-ready.
Common Questions
India's RoHS restriction lives inside the E-Waste (Management) Rules, where producers reduce six regulated substances and back that with a technical file built to IEC 63000. Compliance Manager assesses each part against the six substances from the same BOM you use for your other RoHS markets and keeps the documentation the technical file needs.
Six: lead, mercury, cadmium, hexavalent chromium, and the PBB and PBDE flame retardants, each assessed at the homogeneous-material level against the 0.1% weight limit (0.01% for cadmium). The four phthalates are not in scope.
Compliance Manager assesses and classifies each part and holds the IEC 63000-ready documentation behind it, so you have the substance record and evidence to present if the CPCB samples a product to verify the reduction.
India RoHS runs on the same BOM as more than 270 regulations in Compliance Manager, evaluated alongside EU RoHS, China RoHS, and REACH, with item rollup across the product hierarchy.