Free tools · ADR 2025

Free ADR dangerous-goods tools

Look up any UN number and check whether your product is dangerous goods — straight from the ADR 2025 Dangerous Goods List, with the exact clause behind every answer. No sign-up, no cost. Decision-support only: always verify against the cited clause before dispatch.

UN Number Lookup

Enter a UN number or substance name to see its ADR 2025 class, proper shipping name, packing group, danger labels, tunnel code and quantity limits — each with its citation.

Is It Dangerous Goods?

Check whether your product appears in the ADR Dangerous Goods List. An honest yes/no with the cited class — and a clear pointer to your SDS Section 14 when there's no match.

Checking a whole load, not just one substance?

The full DGMind app runs the segregation matrix across every item, builds your transport document and driver paperwork, and checks driver and vehicle readiness — all cited to ADR 2025. Free during the test phase.

About these tools

DGMind turns the ADR (the European Agreement concerning the International Carriage of Dangerous Goods by Road) into clear, cited answers. These free tools read the same ADR 2025 Dangerous Goods List (3.2.1 Table A) that the full product uses — so a UN number lookup here returns the exact class, packing group, danger labels, tunnel restriction code and limited/excepted quantity codes recorded in the regulation.

DGMind is decision-support, not a dangerous-goods safety adviser. Final classification of a product is governed by its Safety Data Sheet (Section 14) and signed off by a qualified DGSA. Use the dangerous-goods checker as a first screen, never as the final word — absence from the list does not prove a product is non-hazardous.

DGMind is road-first. A substance keeps the same UN number, proper shipping name and hazard class whether it moves by road, sea or air — but the mode-specific rules differ. See the multimodal comparison for road (ADR), sea (IMDG Code) and air (IATA DGR). The sea and air datasets are on the roadmap and not yet loaded, so DGMind names the governing regulation rather than inventing its values.