A refurbisher may have a proper repair setup, trained technicians, storage space, used laptops, desktops or electronic equipment ready for resale. But if the CPCB portal application is filed with an incorrect facility address, expired CTO, missing geotagged video or wrong refurbishing capacity, approval can get delayed at the checklist stage.
This is where E-Waste Refurbisher Registration becomes important. It is not only a basic online registration. It is a compliance permission under the E-Waste (Management) Rules, 2022 for businesses that repair or assemble used electrical and electronic equipment and sell it again for the same intended use.

For refurbishers, the registration affects business continuity, resale contracts, producer tie-ups, institutional procurement, buyer confidence and legal operations. A company operating without proper registration may face CPCB objections, SPCB inspection issues, portal-related restrictions, environmental compensation and business disruption.
The E-Waste (Management) Rules, 2022 came into force from 01 April 2023. These rules created a structured Extended Producer Responsibility framework covering 4 key entities – manufacturer, producer, refurbisher and recycler. If one business falls under more than one category, separate registration may be required for each applicable role.
E-Waste Refurbisher Registration is the CPCB registration required for an entity that repairs or assembles used electrical and electronic equipment listed under Schedule I of the E-Waste (Management) Rules, 2022, extends its working life and sells it in the market for the same intended use.
A refurbisher is different from a recycler. A refurbisher extends the useful life of equipment. A recycler processes e-waste for recovery of materials such as metals, plastics or other recoverable fractions. This difference is important because CPCB evaluates refurbisher applications based on the refurbishing facility, capacity, CTO, plant and machinery, and supporting documents.
The registration is filed online through the CPCB EPR e-waste portal. The registration certificate is issued digitally after CPCB reviews the application and supporting documents.
The registration is valid for 5 years from the date of grant on the EPR portal. However, the business must continue to maintain valid approvals, facility records and compliance evidence even after receiving the certificate.
Key points:
Any business repairing, assembling, restoring or refurbishing used electrical and electronic equipment for resale should check whether it requires E-Waste Refurbisher Registration. The requirement applies when the activity relates to notified electrical and electronic equipment under the E-Waste Rules.
This can include companies dealing in refurbished laptops, desktops, servers, printers, IT equipment, consumer electronics and other notified EEE categories. The business may be an MSME, corporate refurbishing unit, institutional repair operator, electronics resale company or organized refurbishing facility.
The key test is whether the business is extending the working life of used EEE and selling it again for the same intended use. If the business is only repairing equipment for a customer and returning it to the same customer, the compliance position may differ. But if the company buys used equipment, refurbishes it and sells it in the market, registration becomes important.
A business should also check whether it is only a refurbisher or whether it is also acting as a producer, manufacturer or recycler. If the entity imports used electronics, sells under its own brand, manufactures EEE or recycles e-waste, additional registration may be triggered.
Common applicants include:
The E-Waste Rules, 2022 identify 4 regulated categories under the EPR framework – manufacturer, producer, refurbisher and recycler. Many businesses confuse these categories, which can lead to wrong portal filing.
A manufacturer is an entity that manufactures electrical and electronic equipment. A producer is an entity that sells EEE under its own brand, sells assembled EEE under its own brand or imports EEE. A refurbisher repairs or assembles used EEE to extend working life. A recycler processes e-waste for recovery of materials.
This distinction matters because CPCB registration is category-specific. If one entity falls under more than one category, it may need separate registration for each category. For example, a company refurbishing used laptops and also recycling rejected circuit boards may not be covered by refurbisher registration alone.
Filing under the wrong category can create future risk. CPCB may raise objections during application review or during post-registration verification if actual operations do not match the declared category.
| Entity Type | Main Activity | Registration Relevance |
|---|---|---|
| Manufacturer | Manufactures EEE | Manufacturer registration |
| Producer | Sells/imports EEE under applicable category | Producer registration and EPR obligations |
| Refurbisher | Repairs or assembles used EEE for resale | Refurbisher registration |
| Recycler | Processes e-waste for material recovery | Recycler registration |
The safest approach is to map the exact business model before filing. This includes checking whether the business buys used EEE, repairs it, resells it, dismantles it, imports it or recycles rejected fractions.
The E-Waste (Management) Rules, 2022 replaced the earlier E-Waste Rules, 2016 and became effective from 01 April 2023. The rules were introduced to ensure environmentally sound management of e-waste and to strengthen the Extended Producer Responsibility framework in India.
For refurbishers, the key compliance requirement is registration on the CPCB portal. The portal is the official online system used for registration, application evaluation, certificate issuance and compliance tracking.
The rules also restrict registered entities from dealing with unregistered entities. This means an organized refurbisher must be careful while dealing with producers, recyclers, manufacturers or other e-waste stakeholders.
| Regulation / Provision | Requirement | Deadline / Validity | Applicable To | Risk |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| E-Waste Rules 2022 | Registration under EPR framework | Effective from 01 April 2023 | Manufacturer, producer, refurbisher, recycler | Business without registration |
| Rule 4(1) | EPR framework for 4 categories | Ongoing | E-waste stakeholders | Wrong category filing |
| CPCB Refurbisher SOP | Online application on EPR portal | Before regulated activity | Refurbishers | Application delay |
| CPCB SOP validity clause | Registration validity | 5 years | Refurbisher | Renewal risk |
| Rule 4(5) | Revocation for false or concealed information | Up to 3 years | Registered entities | Suspension and compensation |
| Rule 21 | Appeal against revocation | 30 days | Aggrieved applicant | Loss of appeal opportunity |
| Rule 22 | Environmental compensation | Case-based | Non-compliant entity | Financial liability |
| Rule 24 | Inspection and audit action | Ongoing | Registered entity | Enforcement action |
This framework makes documentation accuracy very important. The details declared on the portal should match the facility, approvals, installed machinery and operating capacity.
The document requirement is one of the most critical parts of E-Waste Refurbisher Registration. CPCB does not evaluate only the company name and GST. It checks whether the facility has proper pollution control approvals, address consistency, authorized person details, capacity details and facility evidence.
The refurbisher must submit basic company information, facility details, geocoordinates, CTE, CTO, PAN, GST and other supporting documents. The facility address should match the supporting documents such as CTE, CTO, authorization and GST certificate. Any mismatch can result in a digital checklist or delay.
The annual refurbishing capacity must be declared in tonnes per year as per CTO. This means the applicant should not declare a higher capacity than what is approved in the Consent to Operate.
| Document / Information | Requirement | Compliance Risk |
|---|---|---|
| Company name | Required | Entity mismatch |
| Facility address | Required | Address mismatch |
| Geocoordinates | Required | Location verification issue |
| Email and contact number | Required | Portal communication issue |
| Year of establishment | Required | Facility profile issue |
| CTE under Air and Water Act | Required | Application objection |
| CTO under Air and Water Act | Required | Capacity validation issue |
| HOWM authorization | Optional / if applicable | Risk if hazardous fractions are handled |
| PAN card | Required | KYC incomplete |
| GST certificate | Required | Address mismatch |
| CIN / incorporation certificate | If available | Entity validation issue |
| Authorized person details | Required | Communication and authorization issue |
| Aadhar of authorized person | Optional | Verification support |
| Geotagged video | Required | Facility proof issue |
| Self-declaration | Required | Compliance authenticity issue |
The self-declaration must confirm that authentic data has been submitted and that adequate occupational health, safety and fire safety measures are available at the plant. It should be on company letterhead, signed by the authorized person and stamped with the company seal.
The application for E-Waste Refurbisher Registration is filed through the CPCB EPR e-waste portal. The business should complete document preparation before starting the portal filing because incomplete or inconsistent information can delay the application.
The portal filing should not be treated as simple data entry. Every field has compliance importance. Facility address, CTE details, CTO details, capacity, geocoordinates and uploaded video must support the same operational location.
The applicant must provide details of the used EEE items for which registration is required. The refurbishing capacity must be entered in tonnes per year as per the CTO. If the capacity entered on the portal is different from the CTO, CPCB may raise a query.
Suggested filing sequence:
The portal may issue a digital checklist if the application is incomplete. The applicant should respond quickly with corrected documents and clear explanations.
CPCB timelines are important for planning business operations. If the application is incomplete, shortcomings may be communicated through the portal within 30 working days. The refurbisher has to reply within 7 working days.
For a complete application, registration may be granted within 30 working days after CPCB confirms that the application is complete in all respects. After registration, CPCB may conduct facility verification within 120 working days.
This means the business should be prepared not only for online approval but also for post-registration verification. The facility should be operational, video evidence should remain active, and declared machinery should be available on site.
| Step | Authority | Timeline | Documents / Data | Risk |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Document preparation | Applicant | Before filing | CTE, CTO, GST, PAN, facility details | Mismatch or missing proof |
| Portal submission | CPCB portal | Online | Company and facility data | Wrong category filing |
| Document upload | CPCB portal | During filing | CTE, CTO, GST, PAN, video, self-declaration | Incomplete application |
| Digital checklist | CPCB | Within 30 working days if incomplete | Shortcoming remarks | Delay |
| Reply to checklist | Applicant | Within 7 working days | Corrected documents | Rejection or delay |
| Registration grant | CPCB | Within 30 working days after complete application | Complete application | Approval hold |
| Verification | CPCB / SPCB / designated agency | Within 120 working days after grant | Facility, machinery and video proof | Suspension risk |
| Renewal | Applicant / CPCB | After 5 years | Renewal application and fee | Business continuity risk |
The practical lesson is simple: file only after the compliance file is ready. A rushed application may save 1 day but can delay approval by several weeks.
The official fee structure gives separate charges for new registration, renewal, amendment and annual maintenance. A new refurbisher registration is valid for 5 years.
| Activity | Fee |
|---|---|
| New E-Waste Refurbisher Registration, valid for 5 years | Rs. 15,000 |
| Renewal after 5 years | Rs. 7,500 + Rs. 0.625 per MT |
| Amendment / addendum | Rs. 3,000 |
| Annual maintenance charges | Rs. 5,000 |
The registration fee is usually not the biggest compliance concern. The larger risk is delay due to wrong category selection, missing CTO, inactive geotagged video, address mismatch or capacity mismatch.
Businesses should also consider the indirect cost of delay. If registration is pending, the company may face difficulty in entering producer tie-ups, supplying to institutional buyers or participating in formal reverse logistics arrangements.
Most objections arise when the documents do not tell the same story. CPCB expects the application, GST certificate, CTE, CTO, facility address, geocoordinates and video evidence to support the same refurbishing unit.
A frequent issue is using corporate office GST details while the actual refurbishing facility is located somewhere else. If the facility address is not supported by CTE, CTO or other documents, the application can get stuck.
Another common issue is declaring capacity without checking CTO. Since refurbishing capacity must be stated in tonnes per year as per CTO, the applicant should verify capacity before portal submission.
Common objection areas:
The safest approach is to conduct a pre-filing compliance review before application submission.
E-Waste Refurbisher Registration carries post-registration responsibility. If false information is provided, information is willfully concealed, false reports are submitted or irregularity is found, registration may be revoked after giving an opportunity of hearing.
Revocation may apply for a period up to 3 years. Environmental compensation may also be levied depending on the nature of non-compliance. This is a serious risk for any refurbisher that depends on registration for buyer contracts or formal e-waste channelization.
CPCB may also verify compliance through inspection or periodic audit. The verification may be conducted by CPCB, SPCB or a designated agency. If the facility condition does not match the portal declaration, the registration can come under scrutiny.
Key compliance risks include:
For a refurbisher, compliance should be treated as an ongoing system, not a one-time certificate.
A refurbisher declares 500 MT/year capacity on the CPCB portal, but the CTO mentions 300 MT/year. CPCB may raise a query because the portal-declared capacity is not supported by the statutory consent.
The business may then need to revise the application or apply for capacity amendment with the SPCB. This can delay approval and affect commercial operations.
A company uses its head office GST address in the application, while the refurbishing activity takes place at an industrial unit in another location. CPCB may question the application because the facility address does not match the supporting documents.
The business should align GST, CTE, CTO and facility records before filing.
A refurbisher uploads a temporary video link during application filing. After registration, the link becomes inactive. During verification, CPCB may treat this as a serious issue because the SOP requires an active geotagged video showing plant and machinery.
The business should use a stable, accessible video link and maintain facility proof for verification.
Many refurbishers start operations first and think about CPCB registration later. This creates risk because the E-Waste Rules require covered entities to register and operate within the regulatory framework.
Planning registration early helps the business align CTE, CTO, GST, facility layout, machinery, capacity and documentation. It also improves the chance of smooth portal approval.
For companies dealing with corporate clients, formal registration is often important for vendor onboarding. Producers, bulk consumers and institutional buyers prefer working with registered and compliant e-waste stakeholders.
Early registration planning helps with:
Green Permits helps businesses manage E-Waste Refurbisher Registration through structured documentation, portal filing and compliance review. The focus is not just on submitting the application, but on reducing the risk of CPCB objections and post-registration verification issues.
Support can include document review, category mapping, CTE/CTO coordination, capacity mapping, application filing, geotagged video guidance, digital checklist response and post-registration compliance advisory.
For refurbishers, a proper compliance file can reduce delay, improve approval confidence and support long-term business credibility.
E-Waste Refurbisher Registration is a mandatory compliance requirement for businesses repairing or assembling used electrical and electronic equipment for resale under the E-Waste (Management) Rules, 2022. It is linked with CPCB portal filing, facility documentation, CTE, CTO, GST, PAN, capacity declaration, geotagged video and self-declaration.
The registration is valid for 5 years, but the responsibility continues after approval. CPCB may verify the facility within 120 working days after registration, and any mismatch or false declaration can create suspension, revocation or environmental compensation risk.
For refurbishers, the cost of compliance is much lower than the risk of delayed approval, rejected buyer contracts, portal suspension or business interruption. A structured filing approach helps protect operations and build credibility in India’s formal e-waste ecosystem.
📞 +91 78350 06182
📧 wecare@greenpermits.in