Operators established in an EU Member State shall always apply for an EORI number in that Member State. Operators established in a country outside the EU can choose in which Member State they want to apply for an EORI number. An operator is supposed to apply for an EORI number in only one Member State.
The basic idea behind EORI is that each legal entity should only be assigned one EORI number. This number should then be used in all customs declarations and for all other customs related activities in all EU Member States.
Legal entities are for example limited companies, trading partnerships, limited partnerships, sole traders or governmental as well as municipal authorities, according to Swedish law. The one legal structure that is not considered as a legal entity of its own is branches of foreign businesses (having business registration numbers starting with the figures 516). For such branches, the following applies:
EORI number, application
Which operators will need an EORI number?
Swedish Customs´ index of operators and the European Commission EORI database
How is an EORI number structured?
Information to operators established in other Member States
Branches of foreign businesses
Temporary solution permits Business Registration Number as an alternative to the EORI number
