Compliance is where importers get caught off guard — not at the factory, but at customs, in a retailer's vendor audit, or in a Prop 65 demand letter months after the goods sold. The good news: carpet compliance is well-defined and largely a matter of demanding the right documents up front. This guide breaks down the rules that matter for the US and EU, and exactly what to request from your supplier.
This is general guidance, not legal advice — confirm specifics with a customs broker or compliance consultant for your market. For the market-by-market duty and tax side, see our guides to wholesale carpet for the USA and Germany & the EU.
The core principle: as the importer of record, you are legally responsible for compliance — not the overseas factory. That's why the entire game is getting documented proof (test reports, certificates, declarations) before you pay for bulk production.
Customs authorities, regulators, and big-box retailers all hold the importer accountable, not the manufacturer abroad. A factory can produce a compliant product, but if you can't document it, you carry the risk. Three things follow from this:
Every carpet or rug sold in the US must meet a federal flammability standard. Large carpets fall under 16 CFR 1630 (the methenamine pill test, equivalent to ASTM D2859); small rugs must pass 16 CFR 1631 or carry a permanent flammability warning label. Contract/commercial installations often require the stricter ASTM E648 (NFPA 253) critical radiant flux test.
If a rug is marketed for children — a nursery rug, play mat, or alphabet rug — it is a children's product under CPSIA, with limits on lead and phthalates and a mandatory Children's Product Certificate (CPC) backed by third-party testing. General adult rugs are exempt from the CPC, but if you market to kids, you must have the testing and certificate.
Prop 65 isn't an import ban — it's a warning requirement. If a rug can expose California consumers to a listed chemical (certain phthalates, formaldehyde, flame retardants, heavy metals) above safe-harbor levels, you must provide a compliant warning. Selling into California without a required warning invites private enforcement lawsuits. The defense is test data + appropriate labeling.
| Requirement | Applies to | Proof needed |
|---|---|---|
| 16 CFR 1630/1631 flammability | All carpets & rugs | Flammability test report |
| CPSIA + CPC | Children's rugs only | Lead/phthalate tests + CPC |
| Prop 65 | Sales into California | Chemical test data / warning |
| Textile labeling (TFPIA) | All textiles | Fiber content + country of origin label |
For the EU the central regime is REACH (Regulation EC 1907/2006), which restricts hazardous substances in textiles: banned azo dyes releasing listed aromatic amines, and limits on formaldehyde, certain phthalates, and heavy metals under Annex XVII, plus SVHC disclosure duties. As the EU importer you are responsible — so demand a REACH compliance declaration and supporting test data with each order.
Two more EU points: the EU Textile Labelling Regulation (No 1007/2011) requires accurate fiber composition labeling in the language(s) of the country of sale; and for contract/commercial carpets, reaction-to-fire performance is specified to EN 13501-1 (classes such as Bfl-s1 or Cfl-s1). Note that CE marking does not apply to textile floor coverings.
OEKO-TEX Standard 100 is voluntary, but it's the most efficient way to satisfy a lot of due diligence at once: it tests for many of the same substances regulated under REACH and relevant to Prop 65. It isn't a substitute for a flammability test or a CPC, but as a chemical-safety credential it's widely accepted by retailers and a strong baseline. For how it maps to legal requirements, see our OEKO-TEX carpet importing guide and our factory certifications page.
Before bulk production, request whatever applies to your market and end use:
How we handle it: tell us your destination market and end use when you request a quote, and we prepare the relevant documentation — OEKO-TEX, flammability, REACH declaration — alongside your sample, so what you approve is exactly what ships. This is far cheaper than discovering a gap at customs or in a retailer audit.
No. A Children's Product Certificate is required only for products designed or marketed primarily for children 12 and under. A standard adult area rug is not a children's product, so no CPC is needed — but it still must meet the federal flammability standard, and if you also market a nursery or play version, that version does need CPSIA testing and a CPC.
Tests are run by accredited laboratories (for example SGS, Intertek, Bureau Veritas, TÜV). The factory arranges and pays for testing and gives you the lab report, or you can commission your own testing for independence. For CPSIA children's products, third-party testing at a CPSC-accepted lab is mandatory; for OEKO-TEX, certification is issued by an authorized OEKO-TEX institute.
For a typical order it's a modest one-time cost spread across the production run — a flammability test or an OEKO-TEX certificate is far cheaper per unit than a customs hold, a failed retailer audit, or a Prop 65 settlement. Reusing an existing valid certificate across repeat orders of the same construction keeps ongoing cost low. Treat compliance testing as insurance, not overhead.
An OEKO-TEX Standard 100 certificate covers the specific articles/materials it was issued for, and is typically valid for one year. If your order uses the same certified materials, one certificate can cover it; if you add new constructions, colors, or materials, those may need to be included or separately certified. Always check that the certificate scope and validity date actually match the goods you're importing.
Non-compliant goods can be detained, refused entry, seized, or recalled, and you may face penalties — all borne by the importer of record. Beyond customs, big retailers run vendor compliance audits and will reject or charge back non-conforming product. This is exactly why the documents go in the purchase agreement and are verified against the sample before bulk production, not after the container ships.