Industry Guide

GDPR for Manufacturing

Industry-specific guidance on GDPR compliance for manufacturing organisations. Understand the requirements, risk level, and key obligations that apply to your sector.

Compliance Risk Level

Medium Risk

This industry has moderate regulatory obligations with sector-specific requirements.

About GDPR

The EU's landmark data protection law that governs how organisations collect, store, process, and transfer personal data of individuals in the European Economic Area.

Effective: 25 May 2018Max penalty: €20,000,000 or 4% of annual global turnover
Full GDPR overview

GDPR Impact on Manufacturing

Manufacturing is classified as an important sector under NIS2, bringing cybersecurity obligations to a sector that has traditionally focused on operational technology (OT) safety rather than IT security. The convergence of IT and OT systems, Industry 4.0 initiatives, and IoT-connected manufacturing processes create new attack surfaces and data protection challenges. Manufacturers must protect employee data, customer data, and increasingly the data generated by smart factory systems. AI systems used in quality control, predictive maintenance, and supply chain optimisation may fall under AI Act requirements depending on their specific use cases and risk profiles.

Key GDPR Requirements for Manufacturing

1Implement NIS2 cybersecurity measures as important entities (manufacturing sector)
2Secure IT/OT convergence points and industrial control systems
3Protect employee data including workforce management and health and safety records
4Assess AI quality control and predictive maintenance systems under AI Act
5Implement supply chain data protection for B2B and B2C data flows
6Report significant cybersecurity incidents to national competent authorities
7Manage customer and warranty data under GDPR retention principles
8Conduct cybersecurity training for management and operational staff

Key GDPR Articles for Manufacturing

Art. 5

Principles relating to processing of personal data

Establishes the seven foundational principles: lawfulness, fairness, transparency, purpose limitation, data minimisation, accuracy, storage limitation, integrity and confidentiality, and accountability.

Art. 6

Lawfulness of processing

Defines six legal bases for processing: consent, contract, legal obligation, vital interests, public interest, and legitimate interests. At least one must apply to every processing activity.

Art. 13-14

Information to be provided to data subjects

Requires organisations to provide transparent, concise information about processing purposes, legal basis, data retention, and rights — both when data is collected directly and indirectly.

Art. 15-22

Rights of the data subject

Covers access, rectification, erasure, restriction, portability, objection, and automated decision-making. Organisations must respond within one month, extendable to three months for complex requests.

Art. 25

Data protection by design and by default

Requires organisations to implement data protection measures from the earliest stages of system design, and to process only the minimum data necessary by default.

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Disclaimer: de informatie op deze pagina is bedoeld ter informatie en vormt geen juridisch advies. Voor specifieke compliancebegeleiding raadpleegt u een gekwalificeerde juridische professional in uw jurisdictie.

Other Regulations Affecting Manufacturing

GDPR for Other Industries

GDPR for Manufacturing — Compliance Guide | Viktoria Compliance | Viktoria Compliance