A new European Union directive is set to revolutionize our habits, especially those related to travel. The small, single-use bottles commonly found in hotel bathrooms will be gradually phased out. From January 1, 2030, all single-dose products will disappear from accommodation facilities across the EU.
This initiative falls under Regulation (EU) 2025/40, which is already in force. Initial practical applications will begin in the summer of 2026, with a more significant impact expected in subsequent years.
What’s Being Eliminated
The regulation primarily targets single-use packaging. For hotels, this means the removal of individual shampoo, shower gel, and lotion bottles. This isn’t an isolated decision by the hospitality sector but part of a broader European strategy to combat the increasing amount of packaging waste.
Each year, Europeans generate approximately 190 kg of packaging waste, a large portion of which is plastic. Accommodation facilities have been identified as a critical area where the use of small, disposable containers contributes to a significant volume of waste, often difficult to recycle.
How Accommodation Facilities Will Change
The proposed solution, already adopted by some establishments, involves replacing single-use products with refillable dispensers. While not entirely new, this will become the standard. The user experience for guests will largely remain the same, but internal hotel management will undergo changes.
Hotels will be responsible for refilling dispensers, monitoring levels, and ensuring high hygiene standards and service continuity. For travelers, the direct impact will be the absence of small bottles to take away, while the overall experience will remain similar.
Other Travel-Related Changes
The regulation extends its scope beyond hotels. Another significant change concerns luggage: the plastic film used to wrap suitcases at airports will be progressively phased out, with a discontinuation starting in 2027 and a complete removal by 2030. Alternatives include straps, reusable covers, and security-compatible locking systems. The function will remain unchanged, but the material will differ.
Furthermore, a broader goal stipulates that by 2029, 90% of single-use beverage containers must be collected separately, a technical step with broad implications for the entire consumption cycle.
What Remains Outside the Ban
Not all products are affected by the ban. Personally purchased travel items, such as small bottles or personal kits, are not directly subject to the restrictions if intended for individual use. It’s crucial to note that the regulation applies to packaging offered as a service, not to items bought by consumers, thus allowing for some continuity in personal habits despite the broader shift.
The implementation of these rules will not be immediate, with deadlines staggered over several years, enabling gradual adaptation for both establishments and travelers. In practice, there will be a visible reduction in single-use items: less plastic in hotel bathrooms and on luggage. This is a visual change that precedes operational ones.
It represents a transformation driven by environmental goals, but with a significant impact on daily life, influencing a series of repeated behaviors over time. The direction has been set; how it will be received and implemented will unfold progressively.
