CPSC Compliance for Amazon Sellers and Marketplaces: What You Need to Know After Reese's Law

If you sell consumer products in the US—whether through Amazon, your own website, or other marketplaces—you need to understand CPSC compliance. And if you sell children's products, Reese's Law just made your compliance obligations much stricter.

I led Reese's Law policy rollout across Amazon's marketplace and managed CPSC voluntary recalls for years. Here's what sellers and marketplaces actually need to know about CPSC compliance.

What Is the CPSC?

The Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) is the US federal agency responsible for protecting consumers from unreasonable risks of injury or death from consumer products.

CPSC jurisdiction: ~15,000 types of consumer products

Enforcement tools:

What Is Reese's Law?

The Reese's Law (formally: Reese's Law - Choking Prevention Act) passed in August 2024 and took effect in March 2025.

Key requirements for children's products:

  1. Mandatory incident reporting within 24 hours of:
    • Death
    • Grievous bodily injury (including choking)
    • Any serious injury or risk of serious injury
  2. Choking hazard warnings required on more products
    • Expanded beyond toys to all children's products with small parts
    • Specific warning language and placement requirements
  3. Stricter small parts testing for children's products
    • Must pass small parts test for intended age group
    • More rigorous testing protocols
    • Third-party testing required (can't self-certify)

Why it matters: CPSC is enforcing Reese's Law aggressively. We've already seen recalls and penalties in 2025.

Who Has CPSC Compliance Obligations?

Manufacturers

If you make products or have them made under your brand, you're the manufacturer.

Responsibilities:

This includes:

Importers

If you bring products from outside the US into the US market, you're an importer.

Responsibilities:

This includes:

Distributors/Retailers

If you sell products made by others, you're a distributor.

Responsibilities:

This includes:

Online Marketplaces (Amazon, eBay, Etsy, etc.)

Under traditional interpretation, marketplaces were distributors with limited liability. This is changing.

CPSC increasingly treats marketplaces as responsible parties:

INFORM Consumers Act (effective June 2023) requires:

Critical CPSC Requirements for Children's Products

If you sell products designed or intended for children age 12 and under, strict requirements apply:

1. Third-Party Testing

You CANNOT self-certify children's products. Must use CPSC-accepted lab.

Testing required:

When testing required:

Common mistake: "I got one unit tested 3 years ago." Testing must be current and cover all product variations.

2. Children's Product Certificate (CPC)

Every children's product must have a CPC stating compliance with applicable regulations.

CPC must include:

CPC must:

Common mistake: Generic CPC template from factory. CPC must be specific to YOUR product and YOUR testing.

3. Tracking Labels

Children's products must have permanent tracking information.

Required on product or packaging:

Purpose: Enable targeted recalls without recalling all products ever made

Common mistake: Removable sticker. Must be permanent (molded into product, printed on product, etc.)

Most Common CPSC Violations for Amazon Sellers

From years managing CPSC compliance at Amazon, these are the most frequent issues:

1. No Third-Party Testing for Children's Products

Violation: Seller sources products from Alibaba, lists on Amazon, no testing.

Why it happens: Seller doesn't know testing required, or assumes factory testing is sufficient

Penalty: Civil penalties, product recall, import detention

Solution: Test EVERY children's product with CPSC-accepted lab before first sale

2. Missing or Incorrect CPC

Violation: No CPC, generic CPC from factory, CPC with wrong info

Why it happens: Seller doesn't understand CPC requirements, uses factory template

Penalty: Civil penalties, sales suspension

Solution: Create CPC specific to your product with YOUR testing information

3. No Tracking Labels

Violation: Product has no permanent markings showing manufacturer, date, batch

Why it happens: Seller adds labels to product (violates "permanent"), or doesn't add at all

Penalty: Civil penalties, makes targeted recalls impossible

Solution: Work with factory to mold/print tracking info on product

4. Lead Content Violations

Violation: Children's products (especially jewelry, paint, metal components) exceed lead limits

Why it happens: Seller doesn't test, factory uses non-compliant materials

Penalty: Mandatory recall, civil penalties, potential criminal prosecution if knowingly violated

Solution: Test for lead content before importing, specify lead-free materials to factory

5. Selling Recalled Products

Violation: Listing products on Amazon that have been recalled

Why it happens: Seller doesn't monitor CPSC.gov for recalls of products they sell

Penalty: Civil penalties, potential criminal charges

Solution: Check CPSC.gov/Recalls weekly, remove recalled products immediately

6. Inadequate Incident Reporting (Reese's Law)

Violation: Customer reports child choked on product, seller doesn't report to CPSC

Why it happens: Seller doesn't know reporting required, wants to avoid recall

Penalty: Civil penalties, criminal prosecution if death/serious injury involved

Solution: Report any injury or potential hazard to CPSC within 24 hours via SaferProducts.gov

CPSC Compliance Checklist for Sellers

Before Sourcing:

Before Importing:

Before Listing:

Ongoing:

What to Do If Your Product Is Recalled

If CPSC determines your product is hazardous and requires recall:

Immediate actions (within 24 hours):

  1. Stop sales immediately on all channels
  2. Notify CPSC you're cooperating
  3. Assemble product distribution data (how many sold, when, where)
  4. Engage legal counsel with CPSC experience

Recall process (weeks 1-4):

  1. Work with CPSC on recall scope and remedy
  2. Draft recall notice for CPSC approval
  3. Set up consumer remedies (refund, replacement, repair)
  4. Prepare recall website and communication plan

Recall execution (ongoing):

  1. CPSC publishes recall notice
  2. Notify all known purchasers (email, direct mail)
  3. Marketplaces remove listings
  4. Process consumer refund/replacement requests
  5. Report weekly to CPSC on recall effectiveness

Cost reality: Recalls typically cost $5-$50 per unit recalled (notification, refunds, logistics)

How to Choose CPSC-Accepted Testing Lab

Not all labs are accepted by CPSC. Use only accredited labs.

Find CPSC-accepted labs:

Major CPSC-accepted labs:

Typical testing costs:

Need Help with CPSC Compliance?

Echelon Advisory provides comprehensive CPSC compliance services for sellers and marketplaces, based on years of managing CPSC programs at Amazon.

Services:

Contact Us

Key Takeaways

CPSC enforcement is increasing, especially for children's products after Reese's Law. Sellers and marketplaces that build robust compliance programs avoid recalls, penalties, and the reputational damage of safety incidents.


About the Author

Maneesha Pandey is the founder of Echelon Advisory Services, specializing in Trust & Safety, AI Governance, and EU regulatory compliance. She led Reese's Law policy rollout across Amazon's marketplace and managed CPSC voluntary recalls for years.

Learn more about Echelon Advisory Services