Title 19 › Chapter CHAPTER 13— - TRADE AGREEMENTS ACT OF 1979 › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - TECHNICAL BARRIERS TO TRADE (STANDARDS) › Part Part A— - Obligations of the United States › § 2532
Federal agencies must not make rules, tests, or standards that unfairly block U.S. trade with other countries. When a rule affects an imported product, the agency must treat that product at least as well as similar U.S. products and other imports. That means the same access for testing, the same way tests are run, similar fees, timely release of test results, fair choices about where tests happen and how samples are picked, and the same protection of private information. Agencies should look at international standards and use them when they fit, unless there are clear reasons not to, like national security, stopping fraud, protecting health, safety, animals, plants, or the environment, special climate or location needs, or technical limits. They may, but do not have to, consider standards from a specific international group named in law. Agencies should prefer performance-based rules (what a product must do) instead of rules about how it is made. Foreign suppliers must be allowed the same access to conformity testing and certification marks as other suppliers.
Full Legal Text
Customs Duties — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
19 U.S.C. § 2532
Title 19 — Customs Duties
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73