ODR Platform Abolished: Remove the Link From Your Website
Steven | TrustYourWebsite · April 1, 2026 · Last updated: April 2026
If your website has a link to the ODR platform (EU Online Dispute Resolution) in the footer or terms and conditions, it's pointing to a dead page. The ODR platform was shut down on 20 July 2025.
Thousands of online shops across the EU still have this link. It's an easy fix. Here's what happened and what you need to do.
What the ODR platform was
The EU created the ODR platform in 2016 as an online tool for resolving disputes between consumers and online retailers. If a customer was unhappy with a purchase, they could file a complaint through the platform at ec.europa.eu/odr.
EU law required every business that sells online to consumers to include a link to this platform on their website. Most web developers added it to the footer or the terms and conditions page. Some cookie consent tools and legal text generators included it automatically.
Why it was abolished
The platform didn't work. The European Commission's own evaluation found that very few disputes were actually resolved through it. Most complaints were never picked up by the businesses they were filed against, and the process was slow compared to alternatives like chargebacks or national consumer authorities.
Between 2016 and 2023, over 10 million complaints were submitted. Fewer than 1% resulted in a resolution through the platform. The vast majority of businesses simply never responded. The Commission concluded the platform added administrative burden without delivering meaningful consumer protection.
Regulation (EU) 2024/3228, published in the Official Journal on 30 December 2024, formally abolished the ODR platform. The website stopped accepting new complaints on 20 March 2025 and shut down completely on 20 July 2025.
What you need to do
Remove the link. Search your website for any reference to the ODR platform. Common places where it appears:
- Website footer
- Terms and conditions page
- General conditions (algemene voorwaarden)
- Privacy policy (some templates included it here too)
- Confirmation emails sent after purchases
- Checkout pages or order summary screens
Search for "ec.europa.eu/odr" or "online dispute resolution" in your website files and CMS. Remove the link and the accompanying text about the ODR platform.
If your terms and conditions were generated by a legal template service, check whether they've released an updated version. Many Dutch providers (like ICTRecht and Juralink) have published updated templates.
Check your marketplace listings too. If you sell on platforms like Bol.com or Amazon, your seller terms may also reference the ODR platform. Update those separately.
CMS-specific instructions
The steps to remove the ODR link depend on how your website is built. Orientation table for where to look first:
| CMS | Files or settings to search | Common plugin culprits |
|---|---|---|
| WordPress | footer.php, footer widgets, Elementor footer template, Pages (terms/imprint), WooCommerce email templates | "Germanized", "WooCommerce EU Compliance", legal-text generator plugins |
| Shopify | Online Store > Themes > Customize footer, Settings > Policies, .liquid template files, third-party legal apps | Consentmo, GDPR/CCPA apps, automated legal text generators |
| WooCommerce (standalone) | WooCommerce > Settings > Emails (Additional content), Advanced > Page setup, terms/checkout/my-account pages | "Germanized for WooCommerce" (older versions auto-injected ODR) |
The detail per platform follows below.
WordPress
In WordPress, the ODR link can hide in several places:
- Theme files. Go to Appearance > Theme File Editor and check
footer.php. Search for "odr" or "dispute resolution." If you use a child theme, check the child theme'sfooter.phpfirst. - Widgets. Go to Appearance > Widgets. Check every widget in your footer sidebar. The ODR link is often in a "Custom HTML" or "Text" widget.
- Elementor. If you use Elementor, open your footer template in the Elementor editor (Templates > Theme Builder > Footer). Click through the text blocks and look for the ODR reference. It's usually in a text widget or HTML widget at the bottom.
- WooCommerce templates. WooCommerce has its own set of email templates and checkout page text. Go to WooCommerce > Settings > Emails and click into each email template. Check the footer text area. Some WooCommerce legal add-ons (like "Germanized" or "WooCommerce EU Compliance") injected the ODR link automatically. Update those plugin settings.
- Legal pages. Check Pages in your WordPress admin and search for "odr" across all pages. Pay special attention to your terms and conditions, impressum and privacy policy pages.
If you find the text hardcoded in a plugin file, don't edit the plugin directly. Look for a setting in the plugin's admin panel to disable or update the ODR text. Plugin updates would overwrite your changes.
Shopify
In Shopify, check these locations:
- Footer. Go to Online Store > Themes > Customize. Open the footer section and check all text blocks and link lists. Remove any ODR link or text.
- Legal pages. Go to Settings > Policies. Shopify has dedicated fields for Terms of Service, Refund Policy, Privacy Policy and Shipping Policy. Search each one for "odr" or "dispute."
- Theme code. If the link was added to the Liquid template directly, go to Online Store > Themes > Edit Code. Search across all
.liquidfiles for "odr" or "ec.europa.eu." - Third-party legal apps. If you use apps like Consentmo, GDPR/CCPA compliance apps or legal text generators, check their settings for ODR references.
WooCommerce (standalone)
WooCommerce deserves a separate mention because its email templates are a common hiding spot:
- Go to WooCommerce > Settings > Emails. Click "Manage" on each email type (New Order, Processing, Completed, etc.) and check the "Additional content" field.
- Check WooCommerce > Settings > Advanced > Page setup to find which pages are used for terms, checkout and the my-account area. Review each of those pages.
- If you use the "Germanized for WooCommerce" plugin, go to its settings and look for the ODR section. Newer versions have removed it, but older configurations may still have it enabled.
Email templates and automated messages
The ODR link isn't just on your website. It may also be embedded in transactional emails that go out automatically. These are easy to forget because you set them up once and never look at them again.
Check the following:
- Order confirmation emails. The most common place. Many legal generators added the ODR link to the footer of every order confirmation.
- Shipping notification emails. Some templates include legal boilerplate in the footer of shipping updates.
- Invoice emails. If your invoicing tool sends emails with legal text in the footer, check those too.
- Account creation emails. Welcome emails sometimes include a legal section.
- Abandoned cart emails. If you use a cart recovery tool, its templates may include outdated legal links.
For each of these, find the template editor in your e-commerce platform or email service. Search the template HTML for "odr" or "ec.europa.eu/odr" and remove the reference.
If you use an external email service like Mailchimp, Klaviyo or Brevo for transactional emails, check the footer templates there. They often have a shared footer that appears on every email, which is where the ODR link tends to live.
What replaced the ODR platform?
Nothing replaced it directly. The EU did not launch a successor platform.
Regulation (EU) 2024/3228 took a different approach. Instead of maintaining a centralized dispute resolution website, the EU shifted focus to strengthening national consumer protection bodies and existing ADR (alternative dispute resolution) schemes. The reasoning was that national bodies are closer to consumers, understand local law and can act faster than a centralized EU-wide system.
The European Consumer Centres Network (ECC-Net) remains active. Consumers with cross-border disputes can still contact their national ECC office for free advice and mediation. In the Netherlands, that's the Europees Consumenten Centrum, part of the Stichting Juridisch Loket.
For domestic disputes, national ADR bodies continue to operate. The difference is that there's no longer a single EU website that consumers are directed to. Each country handles disputes through its own system.
Do you still need dispute resolution information?
Yes, but the requirements have changed.
You're no longer required to link to the ODR platform (since it doesn't exist). But other consumer protection obligations remain.
Under Dutch law (and the broader EU Consumer Rights Directive), you still need to:
- Provide clear contact information on your website so customers can reach you with complaints
- Inform customers about their right to cancel online purchases within 14 days
- Mention any alternative dispute resolution (ADR) bodies that apply to your industry, if you've committed to using one
If your industry has a specific dispute resolution body (geschillencommissie), such as the Geschillencommissie Thuiswinkel for webshops that are Thuiswinkel members, you still need to mention this on your website.
Country-specific ADR requirements
The rules around mentioning ADR bodies differ by country. If you sell across borders, pay attention to each market.
| Country | Main ADR body | Mandatory text on website | Primary source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Netherlands | De Geschillencommissie (degeschillencommissie.nl), plus any sector geschillencommissie you join | State whether you participate in an ADR scheme; name and link it if you do | degeschillencommissie.nl |
| Belgium | Consumer Mediation Service (Consumentenombudsdienst / Service de Médiation pour le Consommateur) | Mandatory mention as fallback option for unresolved complaints, regardless of any sector ADR scheme | consumentenombudsdienst.be |
| Ireland | European Consumer Centre Ireland (eccireland.ie) for cross-border disputes; Small Claims Procedure via the District Court for domestic disputes | State the dispute-resolution channel you accept; the Sale of Goods and Supply of Services Act 1980 plus the Consumer Rights Act 2022 require clear post-sale complaint contact | eccireland.ie · ccpc.ie |
| Germany | Universalschlichtungsstelle des Bundes; sector Verbraucherschlichtungsstellen | Required statement on whether you are willing or obliged to participate. Most SMBs state "weder verpflichtet noch bereit" | verbraucher-schlichter.de |
For a broader overview of what EU consumer rights mean for your shop, see our dedicated guide.
Thuiswinkel Waarborg and other trust marks
If you're a member of Thuiswinkel Waarborg, the question isn't just about the ODR link. Thuiswinkel members have additional obligations around dispute resolution.
Thuiswinkel Waarborg members are required to submit to the Geschillencommissie Thuiswinkel for consumer disputes. This means you must:
- Mention the Geschillencommissie Thuiswinkel in your terms and conditions
- Include a link to their dispute resolution procedure
- Accept their binding rulings on consumer complaints
This obligation has nothing to do with the ODR platform. It comes from your Thuiswinkel membership agreement. Removing the ODR link does not affect your Thuiswinkel obligations. If anything, removing the ODR link makes your Geschillencommissie reference more visible and less confusing.
Other trust marks have similar requirements. WebwinkelKeur members must mention the WebwinkelKeur geschillencommissie. Qshops members have their own dispute resolution scheme. Check the membership terms of your trust mark to confirm what dispute resolution text you need to keep.
If you don't hold any trust mark and haven't voluntarily committed to an ADR body, you simply need to state on your website that you're not affiliated with an external dispute resolution scheme. Keep your complaint procedure clear and your contact details visible.
For most small online shops that are not members of a dispute resolution scheme, removing the ODR link and keeping your standard complaint procedure and contact details is enough. Make sure the rest of your legal pages are up to date too. The exact business-identifier obligations vary by country (KVK number in the Netherlands, KBO in Belgium, CRO in Ireland, Handelsregister in Germany), so check the requirements for the markets you sell into. For broader e-commerce coverage of order buttons, pricing rules and the information that belongs in your terms and conditions, see our EU consumer rights guide and the 14-day right of withdrawal.
How to check your website
Run a free scan of your website. It checks for outdated legal links, including references to the abolished ODR platform. The scan takes 30 seconds and flags exactly where the link appears.
Frequently asked questions
Can I get fined for still linking to the ODR platform?
There's no specific fine for keeping an outdated link. But linking to a dead government platform looks unprofessional, and it could signal to inspectors that your legal information hasn't been reviewed recently. More practically, it confuses customers who click the link and land on a 404 page.
Do I need to replace the ODR link with something else?
No direct replacement exists. The EU has not launched a successor platform. Just remove the ODR link and make sure your website still has clear contact information and a complaint procedure. If you're in Germany or sell to German consumers, replace the ODR reference with the required Verbraucherschlichtungsstelle statement.
My legal template still includes the ODR link. What should I do?
Contact your template provider and ask for an updated version. If they haven't updated it by now, that's a red flag about the quality of their service. In the meantime, manually remove the ODR reference from your website. Don't wait for them to act.
Does removing the ODR link affect my Thuiswinkel Waarborg certification?
No. The ODR link and the Thuiswinkel geschillencommissie reference are two separate things. Thuiswinkel Waarborg has confirmed that removing the ODR link is correct. Your obligation to mention the Geschillencommissie Thuiswinkel in your terms and conditions remains unchanged.
I sell to customers in multiple EU countries. Do I need different dispute resolution text per country?
If you actively target consumers in different countries, yes, the ADR information requirements can differ. German law is the strictest: you must explicitly state whether you participate in dispute resolution proceedings. Belgian law requires a reference to the Consumentenombudsdienst. For Dutch-only shops, stating your complaint procedure and any geschillencommissie membership is enough. When in doubt, include a short dispute resolution section in your terms and conditions that covers every country you sell to.
My website builder or plugin added the ODR link automatically. Will it come back after an update?
It depends on the plugin. Most reputable legal plugins and template generators have pushed updates that remove the ODR reference. But if you use an older or unmaintained plugin, it might re-add the link after an update. After removing it, check again next time you update your theme or legal compliance plugin.
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