Title 15 › Chapter CHAPTER 47— - CONSUMER PRODUCT SAFETY › § 2069
People who knowingly break the product-safety rules must pay civil fines. The basic fine can be up to $100,000 for each knowing violation. For many kinds of violations, each product involved can count as a separate offense, but related violations together cannot exceed $15,000,000. If someone refuses or fails to let required acts be done, each failure counts separately and each day of a continuing failure counts as a separate offense, with the same $15,000,000 cap. The “per product” rule does not apply to certain sale or distribution violations if the person is not the manufacturer, private labeler, or a distributor and did not actually know and had not been told by the Commission that the sale or distribution was a violation. The Commission must update the maximum fines for inflation every five years, starting with a schedule published by December 1, 2011, and each fifth year after that; new amounts apply after January 1 following publication. The updates use the Consumer Price Index for all urban consumers (June figures) and are rounded to set amounts depending on the range. When seeking a penalty or agreeing to reduce it, the Commission must weigh factors like the product defect, injury risk and occurrence, how many products were involved, the business size, and impacts on small businesses. Penalties can be reduced or compromised and may be taken from money the United States owes the person. “Knowingly” means actual knowledge or what a reasonable person would have known, including what could be found by taking ordinary care.
Full Legal Text
Commerce and Trade — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
15 U.S.C. § 2069
Title 15 — Commerce and Trade
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73