Title 15 › Chapter CHAPTER 30— - HAZARDOUS SUBSTANCES › § 1278a
Children’s products that contain more lead than allowed are treated as banned hazardous items. The rules set specific lead limits for any part of a children’s product by weight: 600 parts per million (ppm) beginning 180 days after August 14, 2008; 300 ppm beginning 1 year after August 14, 2008; and 100 ppm beginning 3 years after August 14, 2008 unless the Consumer Product Safety Commission (the Commission) finds 100 ppm is not technologically possible for a product or group of products. If 100 ppm is not possible, the Commission must set the lowest feasible limit below 300 ppm and apply it 3 years after August 14, 2008. The Commission must review and lower limits when possible at least every 5 years. Limits apply to products made after each limit’s effective date. The Commission can make exceptions for specific products, materials, or parts if a maker proves lead is necessary, the lead won’t be accessible to a child in normal or reasonably foreseeable use, and the exception won’t raise children’s blood lead levels (or another scientific measure the Commission approves). The maker must show this at a public notice and hearing. Parts that are truly inaccessible to children are exempt, but paint, coatings, or electroplating do not count as barriers. If certain electronics cannot meet the limits, the Commission must require ways to prevent child exposure (for example, child-resistant covers) and set a schedule to reach compliance. Off-highway vehicles are exempt. Used children’s products are generally exempt, except for children’s metal jewelry, items the seller knows already violate the limits, or other categories the Commission decides. The Commission may also change testing rules for lead in paint (substituting 0.009% for 0.06% one year after August 14, 2008), study and approve x-ray fluorescence or other test methods, and must treat its lead rules as Federal Hazardous Substances Act regulations.
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Commerce and Trade — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
15 U.S.C. § 1278a
Title 15 — Commerce and Trade
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73