FCC Locks Down Telecom Testing with Secret Reporting
Published Date: 5/15/2026
Rule
Summary
The FCC is making sure that the labs and companies testing telecom devices play by the rules and keep national security tight. They’re speeding up reviews for trusted labs, improving how they check devices after approval, and setting up secret ways to report problems. These changes start June 15, 2026, and affect testing labs, device makers, and publicly traded companies, helping keep our communications safe without slowing down innovation.
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Analyzed Economic Effects
7 provisions identified: 4 benefits, 2 costs, 1 mixed.
Fast-track reviews for trusted test labs
If your device is tested in a Trusted Test Lab (a lab in the U.S. or in an economy with an MRA or similar trade agreement), the FCC will offer a priority fast-track Pre-Approval Guidance (PAG) review. The rule is effective June 15, 2026, and the FCC says this option could reduce review time and produce estimated annual cost savings of about $770,000 industry-wide (including $218,000 for applicants using U.S. labs).
Revised post-market surveillance rules
The FCC directs OET to revise post-market surveillance procedures, including sampling rates (for example, whether TCBs must sample 5% of certification grants), escalation methods, and public transparency when significant noncompliance is found. The revised procedures are intended to be developed via OET public notice and are meant to improve trust that certified devices in the market match what was tested.
Stronger enforcement and penalties
The FCC will enforce stricter penalties for false certifications and fraudulent test reports and may refer violations for seizure or criminal action. The Commission reaffirmed existing rules that applicants and test labs must provide truthful and accurate statements and noted possible civil penalties, in rem forfeiture, and criminal referrals.
Report number and location of lab employees
Test labs and Telecommunication Certification Bodies (TCBs) must report the number and business location of all employees or agents engaged in FCC-recognized testing or certification, including those based outside the U.S., at designation and renewal. This requirement takes effect with the rule (effective June 15, 2026) and the FCC says it will not require personal addresses unless needed for an investigation.
Confidential reporting channel for violations
The FCC directs OET to create a confidential portal so industry professionals and stakeholders can report suspected violations and national security concerns without public disclosure. The change is intended to encourage reporting when commercial or national-security retaliation might otherwise deter disclosure.
Single consolidated prohibited-entities list
The FCC directs OET to publish a single consolidated list of "prohibited entities" (human-readable and, where feasible, machine-readable) to help TCBs and labs screen applicants efficiently. OET will update the list on a timely basis.
Ownership reporting aligned with SEC filings
For U.S. publicly traded companies subject to certain FCC ownership-reporting rules, the FCC changed the 30-day reporting trigger so the deadline is tied to the company's actual knowledge of a 5% owner (for example, when the acquirer files Schedule 13D or 13G with the SEC) rather than when the ownership change takes effect.
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