Day 1 of Logistics Regulations Enforcement

EU van driver rules

A wake-up call is coming for retailers, manufacturers and logistics teams who believe that new logistics regulations enforcement is someone else’s problem, writes Koert Bloemers, Founder & CEO, Van Express and a cross-border logistics specialist with 25 years of operational experience across Europe.

For years, vans operated in the grey zone of European logistics, moving high-value and urgent goods across borders with a flexibility trucks could not offer.  Without obligatory breaks and resting times, driver hours were barely controlled, allowing workers to drive night and day, performing deliveries in record times. The result of these practices evolved into the principle that what is not traceable, it’s doable.

I have spent 25 years building and running cross-border logistics operations. I understand why those models existed. In many cases, I watched them emerge from genuine commercial necessity: from clients demanding the impossible, and operators finding ways to deliver it.

However, we all know this is coming to an end as of 1 July 2026 with the new EU social rule enforcement extending to light commercial vehicles over 2.5 tonnes and operating internationally. The question that remains now is: are carriers ready for these changes? And how many vans will actually be left out once the summer rules hit?  

The First Days Will Look Like a Collapse

The most common assumption I encounter when speaking with logistics directors and supply chain teams is that July 2026 will arrive with a surge of roadside checks, a wave of fines, and a period of adjustment before things stabilise. However, the most noticeable consequence will be the lack of vans arriving at their destination. 

Smart Tachograph 2 technology gives enforcement authorities something they have never had before in the van segment: real-time, data-driven visibility. 
● Border crossings are logged automatically every three hours. 
● Driving and rest periods are recorded with precision. 
● Remote DSRC scanning allows vehicles to be pre-screened and flagged before they reach an inspection point.
A van crossing multiple borders overnight with a single driver, no documented breaks, and no structured rest planning is non-compliant, and carriers need to understand that this is now visible and their vans WILL be stopped. 

In the first weeks after enforcement begins, checks will concentrate on exactly the routes where LCVs have historically replaced or supplemented HGV operations: cross-border routes between logistics hubs, time-critical industrial corridors, and overnight lanes serving distribution centers. 

When a vehicle is stopped, inspectors will look at cumulative driving time, missing breaks, rest-period violations, and historical infringement patterns from the previous 28 days. A van may be cleared and released. Or it may be immobilised on the roadside until compliance is restored.

The New Route Length

To understand the operational impact, you need to understand what the new rules actually mean for a real journey. Take a common express route: a single LCV departing a German logistics hub at 14:00, bound for a production plant in Spain 1700 kilometers away, with a hard delivery window at 07:00 the following morning. Under the current model, this is a 17-hour overnight route that has worked reliably for years.

Under the rules that apply from July 2026, that same journey requires a mandatory 45-minute break after 4.5 hours of driving. The driver then reaches the legal daily driving limit of 9 hours, somewhere still 600 kilometers short of the destination. At that point, they must stop for a mandatory 11-hour rest period.
Instead of arriving at 07:00, the van will now arrive in the late afternoon of the following day, leaving the production line delayed for 8 hours.

The response from prepared operators depends on redesigning the current routes and operations to fit the new regulations: these are the early adopters that will capture the market when the others will see their vans stopped. Relay systems, where a second driver takes over at a pre-planned handover point, can restore delivery timing and maintain full compliance. But relay systems require infrastructure, coordination, and cost structures that most current contracts do not reflect.

The Cascading Consequences of Non-Compliance


In my experience, the single most dangerous belief circulating among manufacturers and retailers today is that ‘This is a carrier’s problem’. When a logistics operator is stopped at the border, delayed at a rest area, or forced into an unplanned 11-hour rest mid-route, the downstream consequences immediately travel into the supply chain: 
● Production schedules get affected, causing heavy losses; 
● Store replenishment windows close, affecting retail and last-mile deliveries;
● Promotional launches miss their dates, leading to loss of trust, credibility revenue;
● Customer service teams field complaints.

This being said, most supply chain leaders will heavily experience the consequences of the regulations without ever even seeing the cause. And because modern supply chains are engineered for efficiency rather than resilience (running on minimal buffers, tight delivery windows, and JIT inventory models),  there is very little capacity to absorb even a short delay. 

The most exposed organisations are therefore the ones who have built their supply chain models around the assumptions that LCV-based express logistics will continue to operate exactly as it did until now (not under the HGV regulations). 

The Real Extent of the Enforcement


There is a second layer to the 2026 enforcement framework that receives far less attention than tachograph requirements, and that I believe will ultimately prove more disruptive for unprepared organisations. When EU social rules apply to a vehicle, they will actually apply to the entire planning and operational structure, including the driver, but very much beyond them.

Working-time documentation becomes mandatory and auditable, posting-of-workers declarations must be filed before cross-border assignments, and cabotage cooling-off periods apply to van operations that previously bypassed them entirely. And critically, liability for systematic planning violations does not stop at the operator level.

At this point, authorities examining patterns of infringement will look at the organisational misplanning as a whole, with routes designed and planned beyond legal limits (which can no longer be attributed to the driver alone), schedules designed to extract compliance-impossible performance, and dispatch systems that flag violations and override them anyway.

The consequences will intrinsically fall under the whole organisation and can lead to loss of operating licenses, cross-border enforcement escalation through the IMI system and of course, reputational consequences that extend far beyond a single fine.

The companies I have spoken to who are genuinely prepared for 2026 already installed tachographs, are redesigning their planning logic, rewriting their contracts and are having honest conversations with clients about what professional cross-border logistics will cost after the regulations are enforced.

Assuring Companies Are Ready 

In my work across automotive, pharmaceutical, and e-commerce logistics networks, I have seen both ends of the preparedness spectrum, and I believe the hardest part to adjust will be the cultural one. 
At this point, operators should have already mapped their highest-revenue lanes against legal driving limits, know exactly where relay points are needed, and have the infrastructure in place. Most of them are also already retraining their dispatchers on new scheduling rules and recalculating their prices to reflect the new costs. 

Even if the changes are not coming for another couple of months, these adjustments will take time and leaving them as a ‘May problem’, may result in a whole fleet flagged and stopped. Explaining to clients exactly what is happening and how it will affect them is also an important part of the process. Not all clients will understand at first, and these are the ones who will be facing more serious issues with delayed deliveries and out-of-stock problems. 

The clients who understand what is changing are the ones who will make better procurement decisions. They will choose operators who can prove compliance and accept pricing that reflects real cost. In exchange, these are the companies that will not see their deliveries and production lines affected once the regulations are in place. 

For retailers and manufacturers, the questions that should already be in circulation are straightforward. 
● How are mandatory rest periods built into our critical delivery lanes? 
● What is our contingency when a vehicle is stopped mid-route? 
● Which parts of our supply chain depend on single-driver overnight operations that are no longer legally viable? 
● And does our current transport pricing reflect what compliance actually costs?
These are the strategic questions that will dictate how businesses will be positioned in the market in July 2026.

The Competitive Landscape Shift


There is something that I feel often gets lost in compliance conversations: what we are facing here is a market reset and this is valid to both operators who decide to be compliant vs the ones who don’t; but is also valid for clients that take seriously the new regulations vs the ones who will decide to just risk it and ‘see what happens’. 

Non-compliant operators will become unreliable and risk disappearing. Enforcement will find them because now the data will be available at all times and for every operator in business.  The operators who have invested in compliant infrastructure, relay networks, and transparent pricing will be positioned to absorb that business and capture their clients. They will have the track record, the data, and the client relationships to demonstrate that reliable, professional cross-border logistics is possible under the new rules.

Conclusion

I have been in this industry long enough to know that logistics professionals are resilient, quick to adapt and to find solutions. They deliver under conditions that would stop most other sectors. But adaptation requires time and for many operators and supply chain leaders, the clock has already run further than they realise.

The first days of 2026 enforcement can be catastrophic but only for operators who choose to overlook the consequences. For prepared operators and their clients, July will arrive like any other month with running routes, completed deliveries, and compliance data flowing cleanly through the new system.

About the Author: 
Koert Bloemers is the Founder and CEO of Van Express and author of The 2026 EU Logistics Transformation Playbook. He has spent 25 years leading cross-border express logistics operations across Europe and the Middle East, specialising in time-critical and high-value freight. He speaks regularly at European logistics and supply chain events on compliance transformation, operational resilience, and the professionalisation of light commercial vehicle transport.

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