This marks a key step in the implementation of the reformed EU fisheries control framework, aiming to harmonise the collection of recreational catch data while respecting anglers’ privacy.
Background: EU Fisheries control reform – impact for recreational fisheriesThe revised EU Fisheries Control Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2023/2842) was adopted in November 2023 and entered into force on 9 January 2024, following five years of legislative work between the Commission, the European Parliament and member states.
The revision aims to modernise and simplify fisheries monitoring, ensure compliance with the Common Fisheries Policy (CFP), and close longstanding data gaps — including some related to recreational fishing.
Under this new legal framework, recreational fishermen who catch certain species in EU marine waters will need to report those catches electronically, helping to establish a comprehensive and accurate understanding of the recreational fishing landscape.
The European Anglers Alliance (EAA) has welcomed the enhanced clarity on catch reporting, noting that mandatory reporting can improve scientific understanding of recreational fisheries’ impact on stocks. At the same time, EAA emphasises that socio-economic benefits — including angling’s contribution to coastal communities and public health — should be considered alongside environmental effects in future policy decisions.
What changes for sea anglers from 10 January 2026
From 10 January 2026, recreational sea anglers are subject to the following obligations:
- Mandatory electronic reporting of catches of selected species;
- The reporting obligation starts in the individual EU countries as soon as the App is available (progressive introduction)
- Same-day reporting, as stipulated by the EU Fisheries Control Regulation;
- Use of either the EU RecFishing app or a national online reporting system, depending on the Member State.
The objective is to establish a more reliable and harmonised understanding of recreational fishing catches in EU marine waters, supporting science-based fisheries management.
In its latest press release, the European Commission encouraged recreational fishers to “familiarize themselves with the system as it is rolled out. (and) the mobile app to record catches will become available progressively as each EU country completes its national rollout”.
Several coastal Member States will use the EU RecFishing app (see list below), developed by the European Commission, in close cooperation with national authorities, scientists and recreational fishing stakeholders.
The following EU countries have confirmed they will work with the EU RecFishing application:
- Belgium
- Cyprus
- Denmark
- France
- Germany
- Ireland
- Italy
- Malta
- The Netherlands
- Poland
- Portugal
- Romania; and
- Sweden
How data is shared
- Individual anglers submit catch data via the RecFishing app or a national system;
- Data are first transmitted to the Member State workspace/server and handled by the competent national authorities;
- Coastal EU countries submit data monthly and annually for certain species and stocks (only aggregated data are transmitted to the EU level).
This approach ensures that data protection and privacy are safeguarded while enabling EU-wide analysis for fisheries management purposes.
What the RecFishing App is not
- Tracking tool for anglers’ movements;
- Replacement for national fishing licences;
- System that collects more data than required by EU law;
- Perfect solution that meets every user’s expectation;
- Mechanism to disrupt competition in the recreational fishing app market; nor
- Tool to “control” or police recreational anglers.

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Next steps
- From 10 January 2026: phased introduction of the mandatory electronic catch reporting regime across participating Member States.
- Training, guidance and communication efforts will continue to ensure anglers understand how to use the app or national systems, and what species catches must be reported.
- Ongoing dialogue between the European Commission, Member States and stakeholders, including angling associations like the EAA, will help refine the implementation and address feedback from the recreational fishing community.
Links & more information
The provisions focusing on electronic catch reporting of recreational catches in marine waters – established under the revised EU Fisheries Control Regulation have entered into force on 10 January 2026. From that date, recreational sea anglers across the European Union are required to report specified catches electronically, using either the EU RecFishing mobile application or an equivalent national online reporting system – and this across all EU marine areas.