Notice2025-18739

Agency Information Collection Activities; Extension of Collection; Third Party Testing of Children's Products

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Published
September 26, 2025

Issuing agencies

Consumer Product Safety Commission

Abstract

As required by the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA), the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC or Commission) announces that the Commission has submitted to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) a request for extension of approval of information collection for Third Party Testing of Children's Products. OMB's most recent extension of approval will expire on September 30, 2025. On July 11, 2025, CPSC published a notice in the Federal Register to announce the agency's intention to seek extension of approval of the collection of information. The Commission received one public comment in support of third-party testing. Therefore, by publication of this notice, the Commission announces that CPSC has submitted to the OMB a request for extension of approval of that collection of information.

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<title>Federal Register, Volume 90 Issue 185 (Friday, September 26, 2025)</title>
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[Federal Register Volume 90, Number 185 (Friday, September 26, 2025)]
[Notices]
[Pages 46393-46396]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [<a href="http://www.gpo.gov">www.gpo.gov</a>]
[FR Doc No: 2025-18739]


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CONSUMER PRODUCT SAFETY COMMISSION

[Docket No. CPSC-2010-0038]


Agency Information Collection Activities; Extension of 
Collection; Third Party Testing of Children's Products

AGENCY: Consumer Product Safety Commission.

ACTION: Notice of information collection; request for comment.

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SUMMARY: As required by the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA), the 
Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC or Commission) announces that 
the Commission has submitted to the Office of Management and Budget 
(OMB) a request for extension of approval of information collection for 
Third Party Testing of Children's Products. OMB's most recent extension 
of approval will expire on September 30, 2025. On July 11, 2025, CPSC 
published a notice in the Federal Register to announce the agency's 
intention to seek extension of approval of the collection of 
information. The Commission received one public comment in support of 
third-party testing. Therefore, by publication of this notice, the 
Commission announces that CPSC has submitted to the OMB a request for 
extension of approval of that collection of information.

DATES: Submit comments on the collection of information by October 27, 
2025.

ADDRESSES: Submit comments about this request by email: 
<a href="/cdn-cgi/l/email-protection#501f1902110f2325323d392323393f3e103f3d327e353f207e373f26"><span class="__cf_email__" data-cfemail="e3acaab1a2bc9096818e8a90908a8c8da38c8e81cd868c93cd848c95">[email&#160;protected]</span></a> or fax: 202-395-6881. Comments by mail 
should be sent to the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, 
Attn: OMB Desk Officer for the CPSC, Office of Management and Budget, 
Room 10235, 725 17th Street NW, Washington, DC 20503. Written comments 
that are sent to OMB also should be submitted electronically at <a href="http://www.regulations.gov">http://www.regulations.gov</a>, under Docket No. CPSC-2010-0038.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Cynthia Gillham, Consumer Product 
Safety Commission, 4330 East-West Highway, Bethesda, MD 20814; (301) 
504-7791, or by email to: <a href="/cdn-cgi/l/email-protection#90e0e2f1d0f3e0e3f3bef7ffe6"><span class="__cf_email__" data-cfemail="2a5a584b6a495a5949044d455c">[email&#160;protected]</span></a>.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: CPSC seeks to renew the following currently 
approved collection of information:
    Title: Third Party Testing of Children's Products.
    OMB Number: 3041-0159.
    Type of Review: Renewal of collection of information for third 
party testing of children's products, which includes: (1) previously 
approved burden for marking and labeling of certain durable infant and 
toddler products; (2) the labeling and recordkeeping requirements (not 
covered by the Commission's third party testing rule at 16 CFR part 
1107) set forth in the rule establishing requirements for electrically 
operated toys or other electrically operated articles intended for 
children (16 CFR part 1505) (electrically operated toys and other 
articles rule); (3) recordkeeping and labeling requirements set forth 
in the ban on articles known as ``baby bouncers'' or ``walker-jumpers'' 
(baby bouncer/walker-jumper rule, 16 CFR 1500.18(a)(6) and 
1500.86(a)(4)), or similar articles that are not covered by the safety 
standard for infant walkers (16 CFR part 1216) and that also are not 
covered by the third party testing rule or any other rule issued under 
section 104 of the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act; (4) new 
children's product safety rules promulgated since the last renewal, 
including non-toy children's products containing button cell or coin 
batteries, children's clothing storage units, and non-toy children's 
products containing magnets, and (5) the addition of costs to eFile 
children's product certificates (CPCs) pursuant to the revision to 16 
CFR part 1110 (90 FR 1800 (Jan. 8, 2025)). The Commission already 
expanded the scope of OMB Control No. 3041-0159 when it issued the 
final rule to revise part 1110 and the final rule for button cell or 
coin batteries; it is included in this renewal for completeness. As 
explained in this notice, the requirement to eFile most certificates 
does not begin until July 8, 2026.
    Frequency of Response: On occasion.
    Affected Public: Manufacturers, private labelers, and importers of 
children's products subject to a children's product safety rule.

General Description of Collection

    Testing and Certification: On November 8, 2011, the Commission 
issued two rules for implementing third party testing and certification 
of children's products, as required by section 14 of the Consumer 
Product Safety Act (CPSA):
    <bullet> Testing and Labeling Pertaining to Product Certification 
(76 FR 69482, codified at 16 CFR part 1107; the testing rule); and
    <bullet> Conditions and Requirements for Relying on Component Part 
Testing or Certification, or Another Party's Finished Product Testing 
or Certification to Meet Testing and Certification Requirements (76 FR 
69547, codified at 16 CFR part 1109; the component part rule).
    The testing rule establishes requirements for manufacturers to 
conduct initial third party testing and certification of children's 
products, testing when there has been a material change in the product, 
continuing testing (periodic testing), and guarding against undue 
influence. A final rule on Representative Samples for Periodic Testing 
of Children's Products (77 FR 72205, Dec. 5, 2012) amended the testing 
rule to require that representative samples be selected for periodic 
testing of children's products.
    The component part rule is a companion to the testing rule that is 
intended to reduce third party testing burdens, by providing all 
parties involved in the required testing and certifying of children's 
products the flexibility to conduct or rely upon testing where testing 
is the easiest and least expensive to accomplish. Certification of a 
children's product can be based upon one or more of the following: (a) 
component part testing; (b) component part certification; (c) another 
party's finished product testing; or (d) another party's finished 
product certification.
    Section 1107.26 of the testing rule states the records required for 
testing and selecting representative samples. 16

[[Page 46394]]

CFR 1107.26. Required records include a certificate and records 
documenting third party testing and related sampling plans. These 
requirements largely overlap the recordkeeping requirements in the 
component part rule, codified at 16 CFR 1109.5(g). Duplicate 
recordkeeping is not required; records need to be created and 
maintained only once to meet the applicable recordkeeping requirements. 
The component part rule also requires records that enable tracing a 
product or component back to the entity that had a product tested for 
compliance; the rule also requires attestations of due care to ensure 
test result integrity.
    Because these records largely overlap, for this renewal, CPSC is 
streamlining the burden analysis and combining all recordkeeping for 
testing and certification into one estimate, as explained further in 
this notice.
    New Children's Product Rules: Since the last renewal of this 
collection of information, CPSC has issued four children's product 
rules (not including rules issued under section 104 of the Consumer 
Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008 CPSIA) that contain testing, 
marking, labeling, and certification requirements for children's 
products: (1) Safety Standard for Clothing Storage Units (CSUs) (16 CFR 
part 1261); Safety Standard for Magnets (16 CFR part 1262) (does not 
contain labeling requirements); Safety Standard for Button Cell or Coin 
Batteries and Consumer Products Containing Such Batteries (Button 
Battery) (16 CFR part 1263); and (4) Marking of Toy, Look-Alike, and 
Imitation Firearms (16 CFR part 1272; PRA burden addressed in 16 CFR 
part 1250). In this renewal the burden estimate for children's CSUs and 
non-toy children's products containing magnets is included in this 
collection of information. The Button Battery rule already expanded 
this collection of information to include the certification and 
labeling of non-toy children's products that contain button batteries, 
and it is listed here for completeness. Toy imitation firearms are 
already included in this collection pursuant to section 4.30 of ASTM 
F963, as required in 16 CFR part 1250. The burden estimate for these 
new rules is included in the analysis under the Testing and 
Certification.
    Section 104 Rules: The Commission has issued 28 rules for durable 
infant and toddler products under section 104 of the Consumer Product 
Safety Improvement Act of 2008 (CPSIA), codified in 15 U.S.C. 2056a 
(section 104 rules). Section 104 rules that have been issued, to date, 
appear in Table 2. Each section 104 rule contains requirements for 
marking, labeling, and instructional literature:
    <bullet> Each product and the shipping container must have a 
permanent label or marking that identifies the name and address (city, 
state, and zip code) of the manufacturer, distributor, or seller.
    <bullet> A permanent code mark or other product identification 
shall be provided on the product and its package or shipping container, 
if multiple packaging is used. The code will identify the date (month 
and year) of manufacture and permit future identification of any given 
model.
    Each standard also requires products to include easy-to-read and 
understandable instructions regarding assembly, maintenance, cleaning, 
use, and adjustments, where applicable. See, e.g., sections 8 (marking 
and labeling) and 9 (instructional literature) of every ASTM voluntary 
standard incorporated by reference into a CPSC mandatory standard, as 
listed in Table 2.
    OMB has assigned control numbers for the estimated burden to comply 
with marking and labeling requirements in each section 104 rule. With 
this renewal, CPSC is moving the marking and labeling burden 
requirements for two additional section 104 rules that have been issued 
since the last renewal in 2022, into the collection of information for 
Third Party Testing of Children's Products (bold font in Table 2). The 
paperwork burdens associated with the section 104 rules are 
appropriately included in the collection for Third Party Testing of 
Children's Products because all the section 104 products are also 
required to be third party tested. Having all the burden hours under 
one collection for children's products provides one OMB control number 
and eases the administrative burden of renewing multiple collections. 
CPSC will discontinue using the OMB control numbers currently assigned 
to individual section 104 rules. The discontinued OMB control numbers 
are listed in Table 2.
    eFiling Revision to 16 CFR part 1110: Section 14(a) of the CPSA 
requires that manufacturers (including importers) and private labelers 
issue certificates for all consumer products subject to a consumer 
product safety rule under the CPSA, or a similar rule, ban, standard, 
or regulation under any other law enforced by the Commission, that are 
imported for consumption or warehousing or distributed in commerce. 15 
U.S.C. 2052(a)(11)-(12); 15 U.S.C. 2063(a)(1). Children's products 
introduced to the U.S. market must have a Children's Product 
Certificate (CPC), which, if imported, must be electronically filed 
with U.S. Customs and Border Protection at the time of filing entry. 
The final rule revising part 1110 details the eFiling requirement and 
the burden of eFiling CPCs. 90 FR 1800, 1838-39 (Jan. 8, 2025). For 
most imported products, the effective date of this requirement is July 
8, 2026. Products imported from a Foreign Trade Zone (FTZ) must comply 
with the eFiling requirement by January 8, 2027.
    Electrically Operated Toys and Other Articles: The requirements for 
electrically operated toys and other electrically operated articles 
intended for use by children are set forth in 16 CFR part 1505. The 
regulation establishes certain criteria to use in determining whether 
electrically operated toys and other electrically operated children's 
products are banned and requires that certain warning and 
identification labeling be included on both the product and the 
packaging. The regulation also requires that manufacturers establish a 
quality assurance program to assure compliance and to keep records 
pertaining to the quality assurance program. Additionally, 
manufacturers or importers must keep records of the sale and 
distribution of the products.
    Baby-Bouncer/Walker-Jumper Rule: The requirements for baby 
bouncers, baby walkers, and similar articles that are not covered by 16 
CFR part 1216 (Safety Standard for Infant Walkers) are set forth under 
16 CFR 1500.18(a)(6) and 1500.86(a)(4). These regulations establish 
criteria to use in determining whether certain baby-bouncers, walker-
jumpers, or similar products are banned. The regulation requires that 
each product be labeled with information that will permit future 
identification by the manufacturer of the particular model of bouncer 
or walker-jumper. In addition, manufacturers must maintain records of 
sales, distribution, and results of tests and inspections for three 
years and make such records available to CPSC, upon request. Products 
covered under this regulation are not duplicative of an existing 
section 104 rule.

Estimated Number of Respondents

    Testing and Certification of Children's Products: Recordkeeping 
requirements in parts 1107 and 1109 apply to all manufacturers, 
importers, and private labelers of children's products that are covered 
by one or more children's product safety rules promulgated and/or 
enforced by the CPSC.
    To estimate the number of respondents, CPSC staff reviewed every 
industry category in the NAICS and selected industry categories that

[[Page 46395]]

included firms that could manufacture or sell children's products that 
are regulated by CPSC and require testing and certification. Using data 
from the U.S. Census Bureau,\1\ CPSC determined that there were 
approximately 20,100 manufacturers, about 106,700 wholesalers, and 
about 263,800 retailers in these NAICS categories. Accordingly, there 
are approximately 390,600 annual respondents. Note, however, these 
categories also include many non-children's products, which are not 
covered by any children's product safety rules. Therefore, these 
numbers would constitute an overestimate of the number of 
establishments that are subject to the PRA requirements and therefore 
constitute a high estimate of the number of firms that are subject to 
the recordkeeping requirements. Table 1 sets forth the burden estimate 
for all children's product safety rules that are not rules under 
section 104 of the CPSIA, estimating an average annual hourly burden of 
5,037,900 hours.
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    \1\ All Sectors: County Business Patterns, including ZIP Code 
Business Patterns, by Legal Form of Organization and Employment Size 
Class for the U.S., States, and Selected Geographies: 2022, Census--
Table Results for Table ID CB2200CBP. The list of all children's 
product safety rules covered by this burden analysis appears in 
Appendix A of the Supporting Statement posted on <a href="http://Regulations.gov">Regulations.gov</a> 
under Docket No. CPSC-2010-0038.
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    Section 104 Rules: Table 2 summarizes the section 104 rules for 
durable infant or toddler products subject to the marking and labeling 
requirement that have been or are now being moved into OMB control 
number 3041-0159. The two new section 104 rules being moved into this 
information collection are shown in bold text. Table 2 also contains 
the estimated number of manufacturers and models and the total 
respondent hours, estimating 6,338 respondents for section 104 Rules, 
with an estimated annual hourly burden of 97,968 hours.
    eFiling Requirements: As shown in Table 3, the final rule to revise 
part 1110 estimates that 224,000 importers of children's products will 
annually eFile Children's Product Certificates (CPCs) with an estimated 
annual 209,462 hourly burden. 90 FR 1800, 1838-39 (Table 14).
    Electrically Operated Toys and Other Articles Rule: CPSC staff 
estimates that about 40 entities will respond to this collection 
annually.
    Baby-Bouncer/Walker-Jumper Rule: CPSC staff estimates that about 
six entities will respond to the testing and recordkeeping requirements 
of this regulation annually.

Estimated Time per Response

    Testing and Certification: An average of three hours per year will 
be needed for each response. The PRA burden will vary greatly from 
respondent to respondent, depending upon factors that are out of CPSC's 
control and at the discretion of the establishment. For example, 
respondents that regularly change their product may spend more time on 
testing and certification and the associated recordkeeping, while 
respondents that utilize the component part rule effectively, or that 
continuously manufacture the same product, may spend less time 
responding to the collection.
    Section 104 Rules: Each section 104 rule contains a similar 
analysis for marking and labeling that estimates the time to make any 
necessary changes to marking and labeling requirements at 1 hour per 
model. Some section 104 rules also contain requirements for 
instructional literature, and estimates are included for instructional 
literature in this analysis, where required.
    eFiling Requirements: The average filing takes roughly 22 seconds 
(or 0.0062 hours) across filing modes.
    Electrically Operated Toys and Other Articles Rule: Products 
subject to this regulation are also subject to the requirements of the 
testing rule. Therefore, the burden of any duplicative recordkeeping 
requirements will not be reported here to avoid double-counting the 
burden. CPSC staff estimates that the additional burden imposed by this 
regulation over that imposed by the testing rule is 1.5 hours (30 
minutes per response to maintain sales and distribution records for 
recordkeeping, and 1 hour to make labeling changes).
    Baby-Bouncer/Walker-Jumper Rule: CPSC staff estimates that 
respondents will spend 2 hours per response (1 hour on recordkeeping 
requirements, and 1 hour on labeling requirements).
    Total Estimated Annual Burden: Adding the total estimated 
recordkeeping burden for testing and certification (5,037,900 hours), 
marking and labeling for 104 Rules (97,968 hours), eFiling CPCs 
(209,462 hours), electrically operated toys (750 hours), and baby 
bouncer/walker-jumpers (24 hours) the total estimated annual burden of 
the collection is 5,346,104 hours.
    At $41.59 (U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, ``Employer Costs for 
Employee Compensation,'' March 2025, Table 4, total compensation for 
all sales and office workers in goods-producing private industries: 
<a href="https://www.bls.gov/news.release/archives/ecec_06132025.htm">https://www.bls.gov/news.release/archives/ecec_06132025.htm</a>) hourly 
compensation rate, the total cost of the information collection is 
approximately $222.3 million (5,346,104 hours x $41.59 = 
$222,344,465.36).

                             Table 1--Estimated Burden for Testing and Certification
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                                                                                   Duration of
                  Respondents                       Number of     Frequency of    response (in    Average hourly
                                                    responses       response         hours)      response burden
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Manufacturers..................................          20,100               2               3          120,600
Wholesalers....................................         106,700               3               3          960,300
Retailers......................................         263,800               5               3        3,957,000
                                                ----------------------------------------------------------------
    Total......................................         390,600  ..............  ..............        5,037,900
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                     Table 2--Estimated Burden for Marking and Labeling in Section 104 Rules
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                                                                                                        Total
     Discontinued OMB control No.        16 CFR            Description             Mfrs.    Models    respondent
                                          part                                                          hours
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3041-0145.............................      1215  Safety Standard for Infant           12         2           24
                                                   Bath Seats.
3041-0141.............................      1216  Safety Standard for Infant           19         4           76
                                                   Walkers.

[[Page 46396]]

 
3041-0150.............................      1217  Safety Standard for Toddler         111        10        1,110
                                                   Beds.
3041-0157.............................      1218  Safety Standard for Bassinets        72         4          288
                                                   and Cradles.
3041-0147.............................      1219  Safety Standard for Full-Size        80        13        1,040
                                                   Cribs.
3041-0147.............................      1220  Safety Standard for Non-Full-        39         2           78
                                                   Size Cribs.
3041-0152.............................      1221  Safety Standard for Play             34         4          136
                                                   Yards.
3041-0160.............................      1222  Safety Standard for Infant           13         2           26
                                                   Bedside Sleepers.
3041-0155.............................      1223  Safety Standard for Swings...         6         8           48
3041-0149.............................      1224  Safety Standard for Portable         18         2           36
                                                   Bedrails.
3041-0158.............................      1225  Safety Standard for Hand-Held        78         2          156
                                                   Infant Carriers.
3041-0162.............................      1226  Safety Standard for Soft             44         3          132
                                                   Infant and Toddler Carriers.
3041-0164.............................      1227  Safety Standard for Carriages       100         7          700
                                                   and Strollers.
3041-0167.............................      1228  Safety Standard for Sling         1,000         2      * 8,500
                                                   Carriers.
3041-0174.............................      1229  Safety Standard for Infant           26         4          104
                                                   Bouncer Seats.
3041-0166.............................      1230  Safety Standard for Frame            14         3           42
                                                   Child Carriers.
3041-0173.............................      1231  Safety Standard for High             83         3          249
                                                   Chairs.
3041-0172.............................      1232  Safety Standard for                  17         2           34
                                                   Children's Folding Chairs
                                                   and Stools.
3041-0170.............................      1233  Safety Standard for Hook-On-          7         1            7
                                                   Chairs.
3041-0171.............................      1234  Safety Standard for Infant           27         2           54
                                                   Bath Tubs.
3041-0175.............................      1235  Safety Standard for Baby            141         6          846
                                                   Changing Products.
3041-0177.............................      1236  Safety Standard for Infant        1,325     6,528     * 68,650
                                                   Sleep Products.
3041-0178.............................      1237  Safety Standard for Booster          52         2          104
                                                   Seats.
3041-0179.............................      1238  Safety Standard for                  11         4           44
                                                   Stationary Activity Centers.
3041-0182.............................      1239  Safety Standard for Gates and       127       3.6      * 9,496
                                                   Enclosures.
3041-0185.............................      1241  Safety Standard for Crib             38        10          380
                                                   Mattresses.
3041-0197.............................      1242  Safety Standard for Nursing         844  ........        1,688
                                                   Pillows.
3041-0202.............................      1243  Safety Standard for Infant        2,000  ........        4,000
                                                   Support Cushions.
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    Total Burden Hours.........................................................  ........  ........       97,968
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* Includes additional hours for instructional literature.


                       Table 3--Estimated Burden for Other Children's Product Requirements
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                                                                     Estimated
           Requirement               Number of     Frequency of      number of     Response time   Burden hours
                                    respondents      response        responses      (in hours)
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eFiling CPCs....................         224,000             152      34,055,116           .0062         209,462
Electrically Operated Toys and                50              10             500             1.5             750
 Other Artiles Rule.............
Baby-Bouncer/Walker Jumper Rule.               6               2              12               2              24
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Estimates of Other Total Annual Cost Burden to Respondents or 
Recordkeepers: Many importers use import brokers who charge a filing 
fee to facilitate customs filings and reporting with the government. 
Brokers typically charge a fee per entry or per entry line that is 
filed, and each entry line may contain one or more product 
certificates. The fees that brokers charge vary with the complexity of 
the Message Set and with the number of Message Sets filed.
    Table 4 below presents an estimate of filing fees for CPCs. CPSC 
estimates that importers of children's products will file 28,555,603 
annual message sets and expect filing fees for CPCs to total 
$21,987,815 annually.

                                                        Table 4--Estimate of Filing Fees for CPCs
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                                                                        Number of        Number of
                          Additional cost                              respondents     filings with a  Total number of      Cost per       Total burden
                                                                       (importers)          fee           responses         response           cost
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CPC Filing Fee.....................................................         224,000              127       28,555,603            $0.77      $21,987,815
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Alberta E. Mills,
Secretary, Consumer Product Safety Commission.
[FR Doc. 2025-18739 Filed 9-25-25; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6355-01-P


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