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by ensignavenger 1587 days ago
Thank you, that does seem to alleviate some of my concerns as above. I'm not as familiar with EU law, it seems that recitals aren't legally binding equally with the "operative" text. But given the context, it seems unlikely a small blog or web shop that doesn't target EU customers would be in scope.
2 comments

Recitals play two roles in EU law:

1. They are the legal justification for legislating; The EU is not sovereign, so it cannot legislate of its own accord, the EU must show that the legal powers flow from the treaties. So recitals set out which provisions of the treaties apply, and why the legislators think the law is necessary under them.

2. They are an aid to interpretation; the main body of the law should be read "in the light of" the recitals to understand the legislators' intent and to help ensure there is a consistent application of the law between all of the different courts and tribunals in the EU. These recitals are, of course, not part of the actual legal text and are thus not binding, but they're not inoperative.

They're not legally binding since they're written to be understood as clarifications for the lay-person. Ie, not written in the strict language that courts understand and hence, you might hit edge cases the courts might interprete in ways that you don't expect.