Quick Summary — EU Importers
Overview: The EU Ceylon Cinnamon Import Market
The European Union is one of the world's largest importers of cinnamon by volume, with over 40,000 metric tons imported annually. Yet the vast majority of cinnamon consumed in Europe is Cassia — a cheaper, coumarin-heavy substitute from China, Vietnam, and Indonesia. Authentic Ceylon cinnamon (Cinnamomum verum) from Sri Lanka represents a rapidly growing premium segment driven by health-conscious consumers, clean-label food trends, and EU food law compliance advantages.
Ceylon vs Cassia: EU Regulatory Facts
If you are sourcing cinnamon for the EU food market, the distinction between Ceylon (Cinnamomum verum) and Cassia (Cinnamomum cassia, aromaticum, or loureirii) is not simply a matter of taste or premium positioning — it has direct legal and regulatory implications for your supply chain.
EU Regulation 1334/2008 imposes strict maximum coumarin limits in food categories including breakfast cereals, baked goods, and fine bakery wares. These limits apply only to Cassia varieties — not to Ceylon cinnamon. If your formulation uses authentic Cinnamomum verum, you face no coumarin restriction whatsoever. For food manufacturers, this translates to formulation freedom, fewer reformulation risks, and straightforward compliance documentation.
Sri Lanka produces approximately 80–90% of the world's Ceylon cinnamon, making it the only commercially viable origin at scale. The product benefits from a Geographical Indication (GI) recognised under international trade law — on par with Champagne or Parmigiano-Reggiano — providing legal protection against misrepresentation in EU markets.
Step-by-Step: What Happens from Order to EU Warehouse
Here is the complete import journey from your perspective as an EU buyer — what you need to do, what your supplier handles, and what happens at the EU border.
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1
Qualify Your Supplier Before Placing an Order
Before committing to a commercial order, verify your prospective Sri Lanka supplier is registered with the Sri Lanka Export Development Board (EDB), holds a valid spice export licence, and can provide third-party ISO 17025 laboratory COAs — not just internal test results. Request a pre-shipment sample from the actual production lot you will purchase. This protects you from quality bait-and-switch after payment.
See Section 11: Choosing a Supplier for the full checklist.
Your Action — Before Order -
2
Agree Incoterms and Confirm Document Requirements Upfront
Specify your required Incoterm (FOB Colombo is standard for experienced importers; CIF named EU port is simpler for first shipments). More importantly, communicate your full document list in the purchase order — including EUR.1 certificate, phytosanitary certificate, COA scope (coumarin, pesticides, heavy metals, microbiology), and any optional certificates (organic, halal, kosher). Suppliers who hesitate at a detailed document list are a red flag.
Your Action — At Order Stage -
3
Supplier Prepares Production & Export Documentation (Sri Lanka Side)
Your supplier handles all Sri Lanka-side requirements: EDB export registration, SLSI grading compliance, phytosanitary certificate from the Department of Agriculture, EUR.1 Certificate of Origin from the Sri Lanka EDB or Chamber of Commerce, and COA from an accredited lab. Allow 7–14 business days production and documentation lead time from order confirmation to vessel loading. For organic shipments, the TRACES NT Certificate of Inspection must also be submitted before the vessel departs.
Supplier Responsibility -
4
Receive and Review the Full Document Package
Before the vessel departs — or at latest when you receive the draft Bill of Lading — review the complete document set. Check the CN code on the commercial invoice matches your intended classification (0906 11 00 or 0906 20 00). Confirm the EUR.1 certificate is properly issued and signed. Verify the COA covers coumarin, pesticide MRLs (Regulation 396/2005), aflatoxins and ochratoxin A (Regulation 1881/2006), and relevant microbial limits. Flag any discrepancies now — not after arrival.
Your Action — Pre-Departure Review -
5
EU Customs Entry at Port of Arrival
Your licensed EU customs broker files the Single Administrative Document (SAD / EU Customs Declaration) at the EU port of entry. Present the phytosanitary certificate, EUR.1, commercial invoice, and packing list. Under GSP+, cinnamon powder enters at 0% duty instead of 3.2% MFN — the EUR.1 is your key to this saving. Compliant consignments typically clear in 1–2 business days. Physical inspection may occur on a risk basis.
Broker / Your Responsibility -
6
Foreign Supplier Verification (HACCP Documentation)
Under EU General Food Law (Regulation 178/2002), you as the EU importer bear responsibility for verifying your foreign supplier meets EU food safety standards. Retain all COAs, certificates, and lot traceability records for each shipment. Your HACCP documentation should reference supplier verification procedures and show how you confirm each lot's compliance. For BRC, IFS, or SQF audited buyers, Ceylon cinnamon COAs from ISO 17025 labs satisfy the foreign supplier verification requirement.
Your Ongoing Responsibility
Required Documents: What You Should Receive From Your Supplier
This is the complete document set you should request and receive for every commercial Ceylon cinnamon shipment from Sri Lanka. Your purchase order should specify all required documents upfront.
Phytosanitary Certificate
Issued by Sri Lanka Dept. of Agriculture certifying freedom from pests and compliance with EU plant health requirements.
EUR.1 Certificate of Origin
Required for GSP+ zero duty. Must be issued by Sri Lanka EDB or Chamber of Commerce and signed by customs.
ISO 17025 Certificate of Analysis
Third-party lab COA covering coumarin, pesticide MRLs, heavy metals, aflatoxins, and microbiology.
Health Certificate
Issued by Sri Lanka health authorities confirming product meets human consumption standards.
Commercial Invoice
Must include correct CN code (0906 11 00 or 0906 20 00), scientific name Cinnamomum verum, and Incoterm.
Packing List
Detailed packing specification including net weight, gross weight, package dimensions, and marking details.
TRACES NT Certificate
Required for organic-certified shipments only — EU-recognised control body certificate of inspection.
Bill of Lading
Transport document issued by carrier confirming receipt of goods for shipment to EU port.
CN Codes & EU Tariffs: GSP+ Zero Duty Explained
Understanding the correct CN (Combined Nomenclature) code and how to claim Sri Lanka's GSP+ preferential duty is essential for cost control and compliance.
EU Food Law Compliance: What You Need to Know
EU food regulations establish clear requirements for spice imports. Here's what applies specifically to Ceylon cinnamon from Sri Lanka.
Maximum Residue Limits (MRLs) — Regulation 396/2005: Your COA must show pesticide residues comply with EU MRLs. Sri Lanka exporters should provide COAs covering the full EU pesticide panel — not just a basic screening. Common pesticides tested for include chlorpyrifos, carbendazim, and triazoles.
Contaminant Limits — Regulation 1881/2006: Aflatoxins (B1, B2, G1, G2) and ochratoxin A have strict maximum limits in spices. Ceylon cinnamon typically tests well below these limits when properly processed and stored, but your COA must confirm compliance.
Microbiological Criteria — Regulation 2073/2005: Spices must meet limits for total viable count (TVC), E. coli, Salmonella, and other pathogens. Your supplier's COA should include these tests from an accredited microbiology
Products & Grades: What's Available from Sri Lanka
Ceylon cinnamon is graded by quill diameter, length, and appearance. Understanding grades helps you match the right product to your application and price point.
EU Organic: Importing Certified Organic Ceylon Cinnamon
EU Organic certification requires specific documentation and procedures. Here's what you need to know when importing organic-certified Ceylon cinnamon from Sri Lanka.
EU-Recognised Control Bodies: Sri Lanka organic certifiers must be recognised by the EU. Common EU-recognised bodies operating in Sri Lanka include IMO Control, BCS Öko-Garantie, and CERES Certification. Verify your supplier's certification body is on the EU list.
Document Chain: You'll receive an organic certificate from the control body, plus the TRACES NT Certificate of Inspection. Both must reference the same lot number and match your commercial invoice. Keep these documents on file for at least 5 years per EU organic regulations.
Shipping to EU: Lead Times and Logistics
Understanding shipping times from Sri Lanka to major EU ports helps you plan inventory and production schedules.
Choosing a Supplier: Due Diligence Checklist
Not all Sri Lanka cinnamon suppliers are equal. Use this checklist to verify your prospective supplier before placing an order.
Red Flags to Avoid: Suppliers who cannot provide ISO 17025 COAs from accredited labs, hesitate on EUR.1 issuance, lack verifiable EDB registration, or refuse pre-shipment samples from the actual production lot.
Frequently Asked Questions
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