Barcode standards are global, but regional retail practices vary. Exporters entering new markets need to understand which barcode formats are expected, whether GTIN prefixes carry practical significance, and where retailer-specific policies may apply.
EAN-13 vs UPC-A by region
The two dominant retail barcode formats are EAN-13 and UPC-A. Their regional prevalence reflects historical adoption patterns rather than technical limitations—both encode GTINs and scan interchangeably on modern point-of-sale systems.
| Region | Dominant format | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Europe, Middle East, Africa, Asia-Pacific, Latin America | EAN-13 | Default format for most global retail |
| United States, Canada | UPC-A | Legacy prevalence; EAN-13 also accepted |
| Mexico | Mixed | UPC-A common; EAN-13 increasingly standard |
| Australia, New Zealand | EAN-13 | GS1 member organisations issue 930–999 prefixes |
Modern scanners read both formats. However, retailer back-end systems and packaging design conventions often expect the locally dominant format. Printing the “wrong” format rarely causes scanning failures but may trigger supplier compliance rejections.
GTIN prefix misconceptions
A GTIN’s prefix (the first three digits of an EAN-13, or the first digit of a UPC-A combined with the following system number) indicates the numbering organisation that issued the underlying GS1 company prefix. It does not indicate:
- Product origin or manufacture
- Exclusive regional validity
- Quality or authenticity
A GTIN with a US-issued prefix (e.g., 000–019) functions identically to one with a German-issued prefix (400–440) in global supply chains. GS1 standards define GTIN as globally unique and region-agnostic.
Some exporters mistakenly believe they need “local” prefixes for target markets. This is generally unnecessary for retail barcodes. Exceptions exist for specific regulated industries (pharmaceuticals, medical devices) where national regulators may impose additional identification requirements.
Retailer and marketplace policies
Beyond format preferences, individual retailers and marketplaces impose their own barcode policies. These are commercial requirements, not technical standards. Common variations include:
- Amazon: Requires valid GTINs for most categories; accepts both EAN-13 and UPC-A; enforces GS1-checked prefixes for brand registry
- Walmart, Target: Prefer UPC-A for domestic US suppliers; accept EAN-13 for imports
- Carrefour, Tesco: Expect EAN-13; may require specific packaging placement
- Alibaba, Tmall: Generally accept either format; may require Chinese-language product identifiers alongside GTINs
See retailer expectations for detailed guidance on major chains.
These policies change without notice. Always verify current requirements directly with your retail partner or marketplace onboarding team before production runs.
Country-specific considerations
ISBNs and book trade
Books require ISBNs rather than standard GTINs, though ISBN-13 is structurally compatible with EAN-13. The ISBN Users’ Manual specifies regional allocation of ISBN prefixes through national ISBN agencies. Self-publishers and small presses often obtain ISBNs through aggregators rather than national agencies directly.
National barcode databases
Several countries maintain product databases linked to GTINs:
- France: Article 87 of the EGalim law requires food product data submission to Etalab
- Russia: Honest MARK system mandates serialization for specific categories
- Brazil: ANVISA requires GTINs on pharmaceutical packaging
- India: Drug Authentication and Verification Application (DAVA) for exported medicines
These requirements apply to product categories, not barcode formats. A standard EAN-13 or UPC-A satisfies the identification layer; compliance depends on data submission to the relevant national system.
Language and label requirements
Barcode symbols themselves are language-independent, but accompanying text may need localization:
- Human-readable digits below the barcode must match the symbol’s encoded data
- Some markets require local-language product descriptions adjacent to the barcode
- GS1 DataBar expanded stacked variants may carry additional attribute data (weight, sell-by date) in local units
Practical guidance for exporters
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Default to EAN-13 unless your primary market is the US or Canada. EAN-13 is the global standard and satisfies most retailers worldwide.
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Verify retailer requirements before printing. A single SKU may need different packaging versions for different retail partners.
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Ensure GTIN validity. Invalid check digits or duplicate GTINs cause immediate rejection, regardless of format. The GTIN validator and check digit calculator can verify structure before submission.
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Consider barcode colour and contrast. Regional regulations rarely specify colours, but poor contrast causes scanning failures. The barcode colour legibility simulator tests whether your design maintains readable contrast.
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Seek local guidance. International Barcodes Network member sites operate in 120+ countries and can advise on market-specific practices, including retailer preferences and regulatory updates.
When GS1 membership matters
GS1 membership through a national organisation provides company prefixes and access to certain data pools. For exporters, membership in your home country’s GS1 organisation is typically sufficient; separate memberships in target markets are unnecessary for standard retail barcodes.
Some retailers (notably large US chains) require proof of GS1 prefix ownership rather than reseller-issued GTINs. This is a commercial policy, not a technical or legal requirement. GS1 US explains their perspective on prefix ownership versus single GTIN acquisition.
Reseller-issued GTINs remain valid and functional in the majority of global retail channels. The choice between GS1 membership and reseller GTINs depends on your target retailers’ specific policies and your scale of operation.
Summary
| Decision factor | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| Default barcode format | EAN-13 |
| US/Canada primary market | UPC-A acceptable; EAN-13 also works |
| GTIN prefix origin | No functional difference globally |
| Retailer compliance | Verify individually; policies vary |
| Regulated categories | Check national database requirements |
| Local guidance | Contact IBN member in target market |