PPE standards exist to define minimum performance requirements, and how protective clothing is tested, classified, and certified. Most professionals are familiar with:
• Product standards — which define the performance requirements a garment must meet to achieve certification.
• Test standards — which describe how specific materials or garments are tested under controlled conditions.
These standards form the foundation of PPE selection and certification.
But what about EN 14325?
It’s one of the most important—and often most misunderstood—standards in chemical protective apparel.
That’s because EN 14325 doesn’t fit neatly into either of those categories.
You can’t certify a garment to EN 14325, And it isn’t simply another test method.
Instead, EN 14325 acts as something different: a reference framework that helps bring consistency, clarity, and meaning to chemical protective clothing performance data.
Yes, it includes certain test methods. But its real importance lies elsewhere.
EN 14325 provides the classification tables, performance levels, and interpretive guidance used to evaluate test results generated by other standards—including well-known test methods such as EN 6529 for chemical permeation resistance.
In other words, while a test standard tells you how to generate data, EN 14325 helps you understand what that data actually means:
- Does a breakthrough time of a certain number of minutes represent low performance… or high protection?
- What performance class does that result fall into?
- How should one material be compared against another?
EN 14325 provides the framework that answers those questions.
And that makes it far more than a technical reference—it becomes an essential tool for anyone responsible for selecting, specifying, or assessing certified chemical protective clothing.
Because in chemical protection, test data alone doesn’t protect workers. Understanding what that data means does.
Contact us to discuss how EN 14325 applies to your PPE program and how a better understanding of performance data can support safer protection decisions.

