For exporters of steel doors, the European Union represents one of the most lucrative yet demanding markets in the world. However, crossing this threshold is not simply a matter of logistics; it is a matter of compliance. At the heart of this regulatory framework lies the CE marking—a mandatory passport that signals conformity with the EU’s rigorous standards for safety, performance, and durability. Without it, your products are effectively invisible to European buyers and legally barred from the Single Market. This certification is not merely a bureaucratic hurdle; it is a strategic differentiator that validates the quality of your manufacturing process, from fire resistance and thermal insulation to burglar-proofing. In an industry where trust is paramount, the CE mark assures architects, contractors, and developers that your doors meet the exacting demands of European building codes. Let us explore how navigating this certification can unlock unprecedented opportunities for growth and establish your brand as a reliable partner in the EU’s premium construction sector.
Our steel door systems are engineered to satisfy the essential health, safety, and performance requirements mandated by the Construction Products Regulation (CPR) (EU) 305/2011. CE marking is not a generic label; it is the legal passport for placing construction products on the European Economic Area market. Compliance is verified through a rigorous System 3 or System 4 Attestation of Conformity, depending on the intended use class (e.g., external pedestrian doorsets vs. internal industrial doors).
The following technical parameters are embedded in our manufacturing specifications to guarantee conformity with harmonized European standards (hEN).
| Standard | Parameter | Requirement / Target | Our Achieved Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| EN 14351-1 | Air Permeability | Class 3 (≤ 3.0 m³/(h·m²) at 100 Pa) | Class 3 (Tested per EN 1026) |
| EN 14351-1 | Water Tightness | Class 4A (No leakage at 200 Pa) | Class 4A (Tested per EN 1027) |
| EN 14351-1 | Resistance to Wind Load | Class C5 (Test pressure up to 2000 Pa) | Class C5 (Tested per EN 12211) |
| EN 1627 | Burglar Resistance | RC 2 / RC 3 | RC 2 (Standard) / RC 3 (Optional) |
| EN 1634-1 | Fire Resistance | E1 30 / E1 60 / E1 90 | E1 30 (Standard core) / E1 60 (Mineral core) |
| EN 179 / EN 1125 | Emergency Exit Devices | Panic/Emergency function | Certified per applicable door weight/size |
| EN 12101-2 | Smoke Control (if applicable) | Leakage rate ≤ 50 m³/h/m² at 200 Pa | ≤ 25 m³/h/m² |
Every door set is produced under an ISO 9001:2015 quality management system. The CE Declaration of Performance (DoP) is issued for each product family, detailing the essential characteristics declared. Third-party factory production control (FPC) is audited annually by a Notified Body (e.g., IBU, CSTB, or Warringtonfire) to confirm continuous conformity. We maintain full traceability from steel coil batch to final hardware assembly, ensuring the documentation required for building control sign-off in any EU member state is available on demand.
Architects and specifiers across the EU mandate our steel door systems for projects requiring the convergence of forced-entry resistance and stringent thermal envelope compliance. The engineering rationale rests on three pillars: core material science, certified assembly tolerances, and validated thermal bridge mitigation.
Material Science & Core Engineering
The door leaf is a composite assembly, not a monolithic sheet. The core utilizes a high-density polyurethane (PUR) foam, injected under pressure to achieve a minimum density of 45 kg/m³. This closed-cell structure delivers a thermal conductivity (λ) of 0.022 W/mK, directly contributing to U-values as low as 0.8 W/m²K for the complete door system (frame + leaf, tested per EN 10077-1). The steel skins are galvanized DX51D+Z with a Z275 coating, ensuring corrosion resistance for coastal or industrial environments.
Certified Performance Parameters (EN Standards)
All performance data is derived from third-party testing under the applicable harmonized European standards, forming the basis of the Declaration of Performance (DoP) and CE marking.
| Parameter | Standard | Performance Value | Compliance Class |
|---|---|---|---|
| Thermal Transmittance | EN ISO 10077-1 | 0.8 – 1.2 W/m²K | N/A (U-value) |
| Air Permeability | EN 1026 / EN 12207 | 0.5 m³/h·m² | Class 4 |
| Water Tightness | EN 1027 / EN 12208 | 9A (no leakage) | Class 9A |
| Acoustic Insulation | EN ISO 717-1 | 35 dB | N/A (Rw) |
| Burglar Resistance | EN 1627 / EN 1630 | RC 2 (RC 3 optional) | RC 2 |
| Cyclic Test (Fatigue) | EN 1191 | 200,000 cycles | Grade 8 (highest) |
Architectural & Specification USPs
Specifying our doors eliminates the trade-off between security and thermal efficiency. The assembly is engineered as a system, not a collection of parts, validated by CE marking under EN 14351-1 for external doors.
The structural core of our steel doors is engineered to withstand the cyclic loading, impact, and environmental stress characteristic of EU commercial and institutional applications. Performance is validated under the Construction Products Regulation (CPR) and harmonized standards EN 14351-1 and EN 13241.
Core Material Engineering
Structural Performance Parameters
The following data applies to a standard 900 x 2100 mm single-leaf configuration with a 1.5 mm thick frame:
| Parameter | Standard | Measured Value | Engineering Implication |
|---|---|---|---|
| Static Torsion | EN 1191 | > 200,000 cycles | Hinge reinforcement zone prevents sagging in > 80 kg leaves. |
| Impact Resistance | EN 13049 (Class 4) | 240 J soft body impact | Core absorbs energy without permanent deformation > 2 mm. |
| Surface Flatness | EN 951 | Deviation < 1.5 mm over 2 m | Ensures consistent gasket compression for acoustic sealing. |
| Frame Bending | EN 14351-1 | < 1 mm at 1.5 kN point load | Maintains lock alignment under forced entry attempts. |
Acoustic & Thermal Integrity
Formaldehyde & Material Compliance
CE Marking & Traceability

Every door is labeled with a CE marking referencing the DoP (Declaration of Performance) number. The label includes the reaction to fire class (EN 13501-1), the sound reduction index (Rw), and the thermal transmittance (U-value). Batch numbers allow full traceability from steel coil to final assembly, ensuring accountability in the supply chain.
Fire Ratings (EN 1634-1 / EN 13501-2)
All steel door assemblies are tested and classified per EN 1634-1, achieving fire resistance ratings from EI2 30 to EI2 120. The core construction utilizes a high-density mineral wool (≥140 kg/m³) or engineered intumescent laminate, ensuring structural integrity under ISO 834 time-temperature curves. For smoke control, doors comply with Sa (smoke leakage) classification per EN 13501-2, with perimeter seals rated for 200 Pa differential pressure.
Thermal Insulation (U-Value per EN ISO 10077-1)
Overall door U-values range from 1.2 W/m²K (single skin with polyurethane foam) down to 0.8 W/m²K (double skin with vacuum insulation panels). The polyurethane foam core (density 40–50 kg/m³) achieves a thermal conductivity (λ) of 0.022–0.025 W/mK. For passive house applications, optional VIP (vacuum insulation panel) cores yield U-values as low as 0.4 W/m²K, tested per EN 12667.
Acoustic Insulation (Rw per EN ISO 717-1 / EN 20140-3)
Sound reduction indices range from Rw 32 dB (standard 1.0 mm steel sheet) to Rw 48 dB (acoustic steel door with constrained layer damping). The damping layer consists of a 2–3 mm viscoelastic polymer (loss factor ≥0.2) sandwic between two steel skins, bonded under heat and pressure.
Certification & Standards Compliance (CE Marking per EN 14351-1 / EN 1634-3)
All doors carry CE marking under the Construction Products Regulation (CPR) 305/2011, with Declaration of Performance (DoP) and factory production control (FPC) per ISO 9001:2015. Key certifications include:
| Standard | Parameter | Test Method | Performance Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| EN 1634-1 | Fire resistance (integrity & insulation) | Furnace test | EI2 30 to EI2 120 |
| EN 13501-2 | Fire classification (E, I, W, S) | Euroclass | A1 (non-combustible) |
| EN 14351-1 | Thermal transmittance (U-value) | Hot box | 0.4 – 1.2 W/m²K |
| EN 12207 | Air permeability (class) | Pressure test | Class 2 – 4 |
| EN 12208 | Water tightness (class) | Spray test | Class 1 – 3 |
| EN 1191 | Durability (cycles) | 200,000 cycles | ≥200,000 open/close |
| ISO 9001 | Quality management | Audit | FPC certified |
| E0/E1 | Formaldehyde emission (EN 717-1) | Chamber test | ≤0.05 ppm (E0) |
Material & Construction Details
Exporting steel doors to the EU requires strict adherence to the Construction Products Regulation (CPR) and the EN 14351-1 standard. CE certification is not optional—it is the legal prerequisite for customs release and market access. Our logistics pipeline is engineered to eliminate clearance delays by integrating certification documentation directly into the shipping workflow.
Key logistics and compliance enablers:
Performance data for customs risk assessment:
| Parameter | Specification | Verification Method |
|---|---|---|
| Door leaf thickness | 40 mm – 70 mm (fire-rated variants) | EN 1529 |
| Surface treatment | Epoxy-polyester powder coat, 60–80 µm | ISO 2409 cross-cut test |
| Fire resistance | EI2 30 / EI2 60 | EN 1634-1 |
| Acoustic rating | Rw up to 32 dB (single leaf) | EN ISO 10140-2 |
| Thermal transmittance | U-value ≤ 1.8 W/m²K (with insulated core) | EN ISO 10077-1 |
| Formaldehyde emission | E1 (≤0.124 mg/m³) – for composite core components | EN 717-1 |
| Material density (steel skin) | 7.85 g/cm³ (galvanized DX51D+Z) | EN 10346 |
Customs clearance timeline (certified vs. non-certified doors):
All doors are traceable via a unique serial number laser-engraved on the hinge edge. This number links directly to the CE certificate and allows customs authorities to verify compliance in real time via the EU NANDO database. No guesswork. No delays.
Case Study 1: High-Traffic Public Building (Berlin, Germany) – EN 1634-1 Fire Resistance & Acoustic Integrity
A major German contractor specified our CE-certified steel doors for a municipal administration centre requiring EI2 60 fire resistance (60 minutes integrity and insulation) per EN 1634-1. Post-installation audit confirmed zero thermal bridge failures at the frame-leaf interface. The contractor’s site engineer noted:
Case Study 2: Healthcare Facility (Lyon, France) – EN 1125 Panic Exit & Formaldehyde Compliance
For a hospital corridor requiring panic exit functionality (EN 1125) and strict indoor air quality standards, our doors were selected. The contractor’s compliance report highlighted:
Case Study 3: Residential Passive House Project (Stockholm, Sweden) – EN ISO 10077 Thermal Performance & Airtightness
A passive house contractor required doors achieving a U-factor of ≤1.2 W/m²K for the entire assembly (frame + leaf). Our solution used a 68 mm door leaf with a phenolic foam core (density 80 kg/m³) and a triple-gasket system. Post-installation blower door test results:
Compliance Testimonials from European Contractors
Technical Summary of Compliance Deliverables
| Parameter | Standard / Test Method | Typical Value | Verification Method |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fire Resistance | EN 1634-1 | EI2 30 to EI2 120 | Third-party test report |
| Acoustic Insulation | ISO 717-1 | Rw 32–38 dB | Laboratory test certificate |
| Thermal Transmittance | EN ISO 10077-2 | U=1.2–2.0 W/m²K | Calculation + test report |
| Formaldehyde Class | EN 717-1 | E1 (≤0.1 ppm) | Batch certificate |
| Moisture Swelling | EN 13329 / EN 321 | ≤1.5% (24h immersion) | QC batch record |
| Surface Cohesion | EN ISO 2409 | Cross-cut class 1 | In-line test |
| Panic Exit Function | EN 1125 | Pass (100,000 cycles) | Type test certificate |
| Cycling Endurance | EN 1191 | 200,000 cycles (Class 4) | Type test certificate |
Utilize WPC formulations with MDI or PU-based resins, not UF. Verify compliance via chamber testing per EN 717-1, targeting ≤0.05 ppm (E0). Specify LVL core reinforcement to minimize adhesive use, and request third-party EN 16516 certification for production batch traceability.
Specify WPC with a density of 0.9–1.2 g/cm³ and a maximum linear thermal expansion coefficient of ≤40 µm/m·K. Require EN 15534-1 testing for thickness swelling below 2% after 24-hour immersion. This prevents frame distortion when paired with steel skins in high-humidity EU climates.
Demand a U-value per EN ISO 10077-1: ≤1.2 W/m²K for passive house compatibility. WPC core density >600 kg/m³ with cellular PVC coating (≥0.5 mm) reduces thermal bridging. Request supplemented thermal break strips in the steel frame to meet EU energy standards.
Meet EN 1627 for burglar resistance (class RC2) and EN 13241 for industrial doors. Require WPC with impact strength ≥10 kJ/m² (Charpy, ISO 179) and steel sheet thickness ≥1.5 mm. A 4-point impact test at -10°C ensures no cracking in cold EU winters.
Specify a composite with a coefficient of hygroscopic expansion ≤0.3% at 90% RH (ISO 483). Use stainless steel or galvanized frames with WPC that has a polymer content >60% to reduce moisture absorption. Include a vapor barrier in the LVL core layup.

Achieve Rw ≥ 35 dB per EN ISO 717-1 with a WPC core density of 600–800 kg/m³ and a steel face thickness of 0.8 mm. Acoustic seals on all edges and a 50 mm mineral wool insert in the WPC core raise performance to Rw 40 dB for multi-family buildings.
UV resistance requires a co-extruded acrylic cap layer (≥0.3 mm) or a PVDF coating per EN 513. This prevents color shift (ΔE<3 after 2000 hours QUV) without degrading steel-to-WPC adhesion. Include this process in your factory production control (FPC) file for CE marking audits.