Title 21 › Chapter CHAPTER 9— - FEDERAL FOOD, DRUG, AND COSMETIC ACT › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER IV— - FOOD › § 350a
Infant formula must have the nutrients the Secretary requires and must be made and tested under the quality and manufacturing rules the Secretary creates. If a formula fails to provide the required nutrients, does not meet the Secretary’s quality rules, or is not made following the Secretary’s good manufacturing and quality-control rules, it is treated as adulterated. Manufacturers must test each batch before distribution for certain vitamins (A, B1, C, and E) and must test premixes and any other nutrients as required. The Secretary will set rules for testing schedules, in-process controls, audits, and how long records must be kept. Manufacturers must keep testing, supplier, microbiology, packaging, audit, and complaint records and make them available to the Secretary; records must be kept at least one year after the product’s shelf life ends. Anyone bringing a new infant formula into interstate commerce must register their business and manufacturing sites and submit detailed information at least 90 days before marketing. “New” means a maker that has not made formula before or a product with a major change in processing or recipe. Submissions must include the formula, changes, and assurances that testing and processing meet the rules; the Secretary must respond within 45 days. If a maker knows a product may not meet nutrient rules or may be adulterated, they must act. If a recall starts, the Secretary will review it within 15 days and every 15 days after; the manufacturer must report actions to the Secretary within 14 days and every 14 days after. The Secretary must notify Congress within 24 hours of a recall. The Secretary reviews the nutrient table at least every 4 years and can change nutrients or levels. During shortages, the Secretary can shorten the 90-day premarket period to 30 days and can allow importation of specialty formulas under conditions the Secretary sets. Annual reports to Congress are due by March 30 covering submissions, new ingredients, inspections, and related information.
Full Legal Text
Food and Drugs — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
21 U.S.C. § 350a
Title 21 — Food and Drugs
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73