Title 15 › Chapter 47— CONSUMER PRODUCT SAFETY › § 2063
Manufacturers must give a written certificate that their product follows any safety rules that apply. If the product is a children’s product, the maker must have samples tested by an accredited, independent lab and issue the certificate based on that testing once the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) has published accreditation rules. The third‑party testing rules apply to children’s products made more than 90 days after the CPSC publishes those accreditation requirements. The CPSC had to publish accreditation notices for certain rules within specific times after August 14, 2008 (30, 60, 90, 120, and 210 days) and for other children’s rules no later than 10 months after August 14, 2008 (or 90 days before a new rule takes effect if the rule is made a year or more later). The CPSC can choose an independent group to run accreditation, keep a public list of accredited labs, review and update accreditation rules, and extend a deadline by up to 60 days if not enough labs are ready. Makers of children’s products must also put permanent marks on the product and packaging starting 1 year after August 14, 2008, so the maker and buyers can find the place and date of manufacture and batch or run information, unless the CPSC says a product can be excluded or given an alternate marking. The CPSC can set reasonable testing programs and label rules. Labels may need to show date and place of manufacture, cohort or batch info, who made or private‑labeled the product, and a statement naming the safety standards the product meets. The CPSC had to set rules for periodic audits of labs within 10 months after August 14, 2008 and issue testing and labeling protocols within 15 months after that date. Small batch makers may get alternative testing or exemptions after notice and registration; a “covered product” is one with no more than 7,500 units made in the previous year and a “small batch manufacturer” had no more than $1,000,000 in sales the previous year (adjusted yearly by CPI). Ordinary books and ordinary paper printed materials are not subject to third‑party testing, and metal parts of bicycles are exempt from lead testing. The CPSC can withdraw or suspend a lab’s accreditation for undue influence or failure to follow rules. Every certificate must name the maker or private labeler and any testing lab, give manufacture and test dates and places, include contact info, be in English, travel with the shipment, and be given to sellers and the CPSC on request. Passing testing does not replace any other safety rules. No ad, label, or packaging may claim a product meets a safety rule or voluntary standard unless it actually does. Defined terms: "children’s product safety rule" — a safety rule for children’s products; "third party conformity assessment body" — an independent testing lab or body (with some limited exceptions).
Full Legal Text
Commerce and Trade — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
15 U.S.C. § 2063
Title 15 — Commerce and Trade
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60