Photo by Amelia Holowaty Krales / The Verge

We finally have a final official deadline for when new phones sold in the European Union — including future iPhones — will have to use USB-C for wired charging: December 28 2024.

That’s because the EU’s new USB-C legislation has just been published in the bloc’s Official Journal, making it formally binding. Now we know the rules will officially enter into force in 20 days’ time, and individual EU member states will then have a maximum of 24 months to apply them as national law.

The date is more or less in line with previous forecasts from politicians, but until now the exact date has remained vague given the number of stages each piece of EU legislation has to go through. When lawmakers reached an initial agreement on the legislation in June they announced it would be applicable from “autumn 2024,” but in October a press release said the rules would apply “by the end of 2024.”

It is official ‼️#CommonCharger published in the Official Journal. The rules will enter into force before the end of the year & start to apply before the end of 2024! @alexagiussaliba @EP_SingleMarket

Reminder on what this means ➡️https://t.co/LjzLs56URf https://t.co/Rh8PHTG0KC

— IMCO Committee Press (@EP_SingleMarket) December 8, 2022

As well as phones, the legislation will also apply to devices including tablets, digital cameras, headphones, and handheld video game consoles. Laptops will eventually be covered, but the not until April 2026. The rules only apply to devices that offer wired charging, meaning those that only charges wirelessly would not be forced to use USB-C.

Here’s the official text:

“[Member States] shall apply those measures from 28 December 2024 for the categories or classes of radio equipment referred to in Part I, points 1.1 to 1.12 of Annex Ia, and from 28 April 2026 for the categories or classes of radio equipment referred to in Part I, point 1.13 of Annex Ia.”

Apple, which is the largest phone manufacturer to have not already adopted USB-C, has publicly confirmed that it plans to comply with the new rules. Based on its current release schedule it technically won’t have to make the switch until the launch of 2025’s flagship iPhone, but reports have indicated it may change earlier. Apple analyst Ming-Chi Kuo claims it could make the change next year. Meanwhile Bloomberg has confirmed that the company has tested using the port, and said a switch won’t happen until 2023 “at the earliest.”

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