2025-24290Notice

EPA Flags Five Phthalates as Health Hazards, New Rules Loom

Published Date: 1/6/2026

Notice

Summary

The EPA just finished checking five chemicals—BBP, DBP, DCHP, DEHP, and DIBP—and found they can harm people and the environment. Companies using these chemicals will soon face new rules to keep everyone safe. These changes could affect products and might mean some costs for businesses, with actions starting soon.

Analyzed Economic Effects

4 provisions identified: 3 benefits, 1 costs, 0 mixed.

EPA Will Regulate Five Phthalates

EPA announced final risk evaluations (published January 6, 2026) finding BBP, DBP, DCHP, DEHP, and DIBP pose unreasonable risks. Under TSCA section 6(a), EPA must initiate and propose risk-management rules to address those risks, and it will consider the 'reasonably ascertainable economic consequences' when selecting requirements.

Workers Found at Health Risk

EPA found non-cancer inhalation risks to workers for specific conditions of use: BBP (driven by 2 COUs), DBP (5 COUs), DCHP (2 COUs), DEHP (10 COUs), and DIBP (4 COUs). EPA said it will initiate risk management under TSCA section 6(a) to address those worker exposure risks.

Environmental Risks to Aquatic Life

EPA found unreasonable risks to the environment, especially aquatic organisms, driven by multiple conditions of use: BBP (environmental risk driven by 7 COUs), DBP (1 COU), DEHP (20 COUs, with 18 COUs also driven by sediment pore water), and DIBP (7 COUs). DCHP did not show environmental unreasonable risk under any COUs.

Consumers Not Identified at Risk

For BBP, DBP, DCHP, DEHP, and DIBP, EPA did not identify unreasonable risk of injury to consumers or the general population under any conditions of use. The final risk evaluations explicitly state that consumers and the general population were not found to face unreasonable risks.

Your PRIA Score

Score Hidden

Personalized for You

How does this regulation affect your finances?

Sign up for a PRIA Policy Scan to see your personalized alignment score for this federal register document and every other regulation we track. We analyze your financial profile against policy provisions to show you exactly what matters to your wallet.

Free to start

Key Dates

Published Date
1/6/2026

Department and Agencies

Department
Independent Agency
Agency
Environmental Protection Agency
Source: View HTML
Back to Federal Register

Take It Personal

Get Your Personalized Policy View

Start a Free Government Policy Watch to see how policy affects your household, then upgrade to PRIA Full Coverage for year-round monitoring.

Already have an account? Sign in