Introduction
'European Commission websites' refers to the entire landscape of websites on the Europa (europa.eu) domain owned by the European Commission's services. Collectively, they represent the Commission's web presence. The definitions, categories, branding and rules that apply to the European Commission's websites and their development can be found below.
Categories of European Commission websites
Depending on their type of content, European Commission websites follow specific rules depending on the site category they belong to.
3 websites categories have been defined:
- Core websites
- there are 2 core websites: the inter-institutional website and the European Commission website
- the European Commission website consists of different entities, which currently are the following three:
- host stable, core information, common to most Commission departments
- have a thematic structure
- serve as hubs for onward navigation to further thematic or specific content
- there are 2 core websites: the inter-institutional website and the European Commission website
- Standardised websites
- give details of policies for which the DG/Executive agency is responsible
- are strongly aligned with the core sites to provide seamless navigation between core and standardised sites
- EC branded harmonised and EU branded harmonised websites
- address specific communication needs, and as a result, have specific content and technical needs, e.g. Campaign websites; Event websites; Blogs; Network websites; Partnership websites; Information systems; Internal policy websites
Branding
All European Commission websites are either
- EU branded: should be used for online communication if the mission and content go beyond the activities of one single EU institution or cover a policy, activity or campaign which is either institution-agnostic or common to the different EU institutions and bodies; or
- EC branded: the EC logo should be used, in line with the rules in the Europa Web Guide, for online communication stemming directly from the Commission's actions in its areas of responsibility and its executive role, e.g. legislation and policy initiatives, work programme, services, official documents, news and current affairs (press releases, events, etc.).
URLs
All European Commission websites must be hosted on the 'europa.eu' domain and implement the global banner webtool.
Exceptions:
- for promotional purposes a ‘.eu’ web address can be registered and redirected to the website hosted on the ‘europa.eu’ domain. See Promotional URLs.
- exceptionally, where a site is jointly owned with a third party, it may be hosted outside the ‘europa.eu’ domain. The address should be decided on with the third party, with preference given to the top-level domain ‘.eu’. DG COMM must validate this choice.
Definitions
European Commission websites
European Commission websites are all websites owned by one of the European Commission departments (Directorates-General, Executive Agencies and Service Departments).
Website
A website is a collection of related web pages
- sharing common characteristics (theme, navigation and visual aspects)
- identified (internally and/or externally) by a site name
- managed and communicated as a single entity
- hosted on a specific instance of a web server.
Site owner
As regards the European Commission (including executive agencies), the website owner is the service that does any of the following:
- defines and implements the strategy for the site
- holds direct financial responsibility* for the site
- is accountable for the site.
* EU institutions hold direct financial responsibility for a site, if the site is created through a call for tender or by internal means.
They are not considered directly financially responsible for a site if it is developed using EC funding or a grant.
Web page
A webpage is any content encoded in a hypertext formatted document (e.g. HTML). A webpage regroups web assets needed to convey an editorial message and the means to display it correctly.
We can identify two main types of webpages:
- Static – a page where the HTML code is stored on the server in the form that it is delivered to the user. Static webpages typically have a unique URL for each page.
- Dynamic – a page that is assembled at the time it is requested. The same URL may display different content depending on user, time, location, etc.
Contact and support
Need further assistance on this topic? Please contact the team in charge of Europa Domain Management (EU Login required).