For European steel construction projects, structural fasteners are not treated like ordinary hardware. If a bolt assembly is used in a regulated structural application, buyers must check whether CE marking, Declaration of Performance, and the correct EN standard apply.
This is where many importers make mistakes.
They ask for “8.8 structural bolts” or “DIN bolts for steel structure,” but the European project may require CE-marked assemblies under EN 15048 or EN 14399. A standard bolt may look similar, but if the marking, documentation, and assembly control are missing, it may not be accepted on site.
What CE Marking Means for Structural Fasteners
CE marking for construction products shows that the manufacturer has declared product performance according to the relevant European rules. It is not simply a quality logo. It is linked to the applicable harmonized standard, factory production control, testing, traceability, and required documents.
For structural bolting, buyers should confirm whether the project requires:
- CE-marked structural bolt assemblies
- Declaration of Performance
- Correct EN standard
- Batch traceability
- Manufacturer identification
- Assembly-level supply, not random mixed parts
- Inspection and test documentation
Buyers comparing structural fastener options can review available high-strength fasteners and standard fasteners before preparing the RFQ.
EN 15048 vs EN 14399
European structural fasteners are commonly divided by whether the connection is non-preloaded or preloaded.
| Standard | Application Type | Typical Buyer Concern |
|---|---|---|
| EN 15048 | Non-preloaded structural bolting assemblies | Correct assembly marking and documentation |
| EN 14399 | High-strength structural bolting assemblies for preloading | Suitability for controlled preload |
| Project drawings | May specify additional requirements | Must be checked before ordering |
| National annex or project spec | May add local rules | Do not rely on product name alone |
The key word is “assembly.” Structural fasteners for CE-marked supply are often controlled as bolt, nut, and washer assemblies. Buying bolts from one source, nuts from another, and washers from a third may create compliance and traceability problems.
What Buyers Should Check Before Ordering
Product Standard
Ask the supplier which standard the fasteners follow. Do not accept only “structural bolt” as a complete description.
The RFQ should state:
- EN 15048 or EN 14399 requirement
- Bolt size and length
- Strength grade or property class
- Nut and washer matching requirement
- Surface finish
- Required CE marking and DoP
- Packing and label requirements
For full project lists, buyers can also review the broader fastener products range.
Marking and Labeling
Structural fastener packaging should allow the buyer, contractor, and inspector to identify the goods clearly.
Labels should include:
- Product standard
- Size
- Grade
- Manufacturer or batch identification
- Assembly type
- Quantity
- Surface finish
- Traceability information
- CE-related information where required
Poor labeling can delay receiving, inspection, and project approval.
Surface Finish and Coating Requirements
European structural fasteners may be supplied with different finishes depending on the project environment. Common options include plain, zinc plated, hot-dip galvanized, zinc flake, or other specified coatings.
For outdoor steel structures, corrosion protection must be confirmed carefully. Hot-dip galvanizing can improve protection, but coating thickness may affect thread fit. Zinc flake coatings may be preferred in some high-strength assemblies where controlled thickness and corrosion resistance matter.
Buyers can review coated fasteners when corrosion resistance is part of the project requirement.
Common Mistakes in European Project Sourcing
Mistake 1: Ordering Only by DIN or ISO
DIN or ISO dimensions may not satisfy CE requirements for structural assemblies. European projects may require EN 15048 or EN 14399 compliance.
Mistake 2: Treating CE Marking as Optional
If the fastener is covered by the applicable construction product requirements and project specification, CE documentation may be mandatory for acceptance.
Mistake 3: Mixing Assembly Components
Structural bolt, nut, and washer assemblies should be matched and traceable. Random mixing may create inspection issues.
Mistake 4: Missing the Declaration of Performance
A certificate alone may not replace the required Declaration of Performance. Buyers should request the correct document before shipment.
Mistake 5: Ignoring Project-Specific Rules
Some projects may add requirements for coating, testing, third-party inspection, packing, or local approval.
RFQ Checklist for CE-Related Structural Fasteners
Before placing an order, confirm the following:
| RFQ Item | What to Specify |
|---|---|
| Standard | EN 15048, EN 14399, or project requirement |
| Assembly | Bolt, nut, washer set details |
| Size | Diameter, length, thread pitch, washer size |
| Grade | Property class or project-specified strength |
| Finish | Plain, HDG, zinc flake, or specified coating |
| Documentation | DoP, MTC, inspection report, CE-related documents |
| Traceability | Batch number and manufacturer identification |
| Packaging | Original packing, labels, carton marks |
| Inspection | Project, third-party, or pre-shipment inspection needs |
If a project requires non-standard dimensions or special assemblies, buyers should use custom non-standard fasteners and confirm compliance requirements before production.
Final Advice
CE requirements for structural fasteners in European projects should be checked before price negotiation, not after shipment. The buyer should confirm the applicable EN standard, assembly type, CE marking requirement, Declaration of Performance, traceability, coating, and inspection documents.
For European structural work, the safest approach is simple: define the standard first, then quote the fastener.