UtahH.B. 4932026 General SessionHouseWALLET

Consumer Products Amendments

Sponsored By: Jake Sawyer (Republican)

Signed by Governor

Department of Agriculture and FoodBusinessAgriculture & Food

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Bill Overview

Analyzed Economic Effects

4 provisions identified: 0 benefits, 2 costs, 2 mixed.

Consumer watchdog can fine violations

The Division of Consumer Protection enforces the menstrual product rules. It can fine up to $2,500 per violation in administrative actions or in court. If the court grants the Division relief, it must award attorney fees, court costs, and investigative fees. Breaking an administrative or court order can bring civil penalties up to $5,000 per violation. All fine money goes to the Consumer Protection Education and Training Fund. The Division also now enforces the Utah Digital Choice Act and this chapter.

Tiered penalties and product seizures

The state department can enter business sites, stop and inspect commercial vehicles, seize evidence, and issue stop‑use or hold orders. It can seek court orders to stop sales without posting a bond. Penalties rise with repeat violations: first is a notice; second can charge you the department’s inspection costs; third up to $500; fourth up to $1,000; fifth up to $5,000; sixth or later up to $10,000. A third or later penalty cannot be imposed until at least 30 days after the prior civil penalty. Collected penalties go to the General Fund for enforcement.

Ingredient labels on menstrual products

For products made on or after December 1, 2027, packages must list each intentionally added ingredient. List them by weight; items under 1% can be listed after the others. Makers may use a website link instead of full on-box text. Trade‑secret ingredients can be shown by a common name. Update the package within 18 months of a change and any online list within 6 months. This gives shoppers clear ingredient info and requires makers to keep labels or web pages current.

What products and chemicals count

The law defines key terms for these rules. It explains what counts as a menstrual product and who is a manufacturer. It defines “ingredient intentionally added” and “chemical,” naming lead, cadmium, arsenic, dioxin, and PFAS, and defines PFAS. It explains what qualifies as confidential business information. These definitions tell businesses which products and ingredients must be disclosed.

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Sponsors & Cosponsors

Sponsor

  • Jake Sawyer

    Republican • House

Cosponsors

  • Kristen Chevrier

    Republican • House

  • Ann Millner

    Republican • Senate

  • Candice B. Pierucci

    Republican • House

Roll Call Votes

All Roll Calls

Yes: 171 • No: 2

Senate vote 3/6/2026

Senate/ substituted

Yes: 0 • No: 0

Senate vote 3/6/2026

Senate/ passed 2nd & 3rd readings/ suspension

Yes: 25 • No: 0

House vote 3/6/2026

House/ concurs with Senate amendment

Yes: 64 • No: 1

House vote 3/2/2026

Senate Comm - Favorable Recommendation

Yes: 6 • No: 0

House vote 2/24/2026

House/ passed 3rd reading

Yes: 65 • No: 1

House vote 2/18/2026

House Comm - Favorable Recommendation

Yes: 11 • No: 0

Actions Timeline

  1. Governor Signed

    3/19/2026
  2. House/ to Governor

    3/16/2026House
  3. House/ received enrolled bill from Printing

    3/16/2026House
  4. House/ enrolled bill to Printing

    3/12/2026House
  5. Enrolled Bill Returned to House or Senate

    3/12/2026
  6. Draft of Enrolled Bill Prepared

    3/11/2026
  7. Bill Received from House for Enrolling

    3/11/2026
  8. House/ signed by Speaker/ sent for enrolling

    3/11/2026House
  9. House/ received from Senate

    3/11/2026House
  10. Senate/ to House

    3/10/2026Senate
  11. Senate/ signed by President/ returned to House

    3/10/2026Senate
  12. Senate/ received from House

    3/10/2026Senate
  13. House/ to Senate

    3/6/2026House
  14. House/ concurs with Senate amendment

    3/6/2026House
  15. House/ placed on Concurrence Calendar

    3/6/2026House
  16. House/ received from Senate

    3/6/2026House
  17. Senate/ to House with amendments

    3/6/2026Senate
  18. Senate/ passed 2nd & 3rd readings/ suspension

    3/6/2026Senate
  19. Senate/ substituted

    3/6/2026Senate
  20. Senate/ 2nd & 3rd readings/ suspension

    3/6/2026Senate
  21. Senate/ Rules to 2nd Reading Calendar

    3/6/2026Senate
  22. Senate/ 2nd Reading Calendar to Rules

    3/4/2026Senate
  23. Senate/ placed on 2nd Reading Calendar

    3/3/2026Senate
  24. Senate/ committee report favorable

    3/3/2026Senate
  25. Senate Comm - Favorable Recommendation

    3/2/2026

Bill Text

  • Enrolled

    3/12/2026

  • Substitute #1

    3/6/2026

  • Introduced

    2/4/2026

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