SHKL ha sido un fabricante líder de tocador de baño, puertas de ducha y espejos de baño LED desde 2004.
Below I will break down the common certifications for bathroom sanitary ware and bathroom vanities separately, because the certification logic for these two categories is not exactly the same:
If you are targeting the North American market, the most common and important certifications/compliance requirements usually include:
If we narrow the scope to bathroom vanities, they can be viewed in two categories:
The point most easily misunderstood is: a cabinet body alone usually does not need cUPC; however, if you are selling a complete vanity set, including a ceramic basin, faucet, drain, and mirror light, then those supporting components will correspond to cUPC, NSF, WaterSense, UL/ETL, and other requirements respectively.
Strictly speaking, when the industry says “CARB certification,” it usually refers to the California Air Resources Board requirements for formaldehyde emissions from composite wood products. CARB’s composite wood products regulation applies to hardwood plywood, particleboard, MDF, as well as finished goods containing these materials. This is especially important for bathroom vanities, because most modern bathroom vanities use MDF, PB, plywood, decorative panels, and other composite wood materials.
If your bathroom vanity body, doors, side panels, or drawer panels use regulated composite wood panels, then these materials must comply with the relevant limits. CARB also explains that finished goods containing these materials are covered by the regulation.
At the U.S. federal level, EPA clearly states: after March 22, 2019, products should be labeled as TSCA Title VI compliant. So now, for the U.S. market, it is not recommended to say only “CARB.” More professional expressions are usually:
That is to say, CARB is the historically and commercially familiar term, but for nationwide U.S. sales, TSCA Title VI should be the core compliance language.
FSC = Forest Stewardship Council. Its core is not formaldehyde, nor water safety, but whether the wood comes from responsibly managed forests, and whether the entire supply chain is traceable. FSC officially explains that Chain of Custody (CoC) is used to verify whether forest-based materials can be credibly identified, separated, and tracked from forest to finished product.
It is especially useful for wooden bathroom vanities, mirror cabinets, wood-framed mirrors, and wooden storage cabinets, because:
This point should be made clear:
FSC does not prove waterproof performance, structural strength, hardware durability, or low formaldehyde content; what it proves is wood/wood-fiber sourcing and supply-chain management. Many buyers mistakenly treat FSC as an “all-purpose environmental certification,” which is inaccurate.
cUPC is one of the most representative conformity marks for plumbing products in North America. IAPMO explains that its cUPC mark is widely recognized in North America and is used to prove that a product has passed independent testing and complies with relevant health and performance requirements.
Applies to components in contact with drinking water and focuses on whether materials leach harmful substances into the water. It is very important for faucets, valves, and water supply-related parts.
Focuses on whether lead content complies with “lead free” requirements. NSF explains that this standard verifies whether drinking water system components meet the lead content requirements of the Safe Drinking Water Act.
It is very valuable for North American retail, engineering, and hotel projects, especially for bathroom faucets. EPA explains that products bearing the WaterSense label must be independently certified and save at least 20% water; bathroom faucets have a maximum flow rate of 1.5 gpm.
Very important for LED bathroom mirrors, defogging mirrors, mirror lights, mirror cabinets with outlets, and smart mirrors. Intertek clearly states that ETL Listed is an NRTL certification mark and is widely accepted by North American regulators and retailers; UL also provides testing and certification services for indoor lighting and plumbing products.
Suitable for high-end projects, green buildings, and designer channels. They mainly prove low chemical emissions / low VOCs, and are very helpful in marketing “eco-friendly bathroom vanities,” but they are generally not basic market-entry necessities.
This is not a product certification, but a California warning requirement. Buyers often ask about it because it directly affects California sales labels, packaging, and platform compliance.
Not a certification mark, but in hotels, apartments, and public building projects, it is often more important than in regular retail.
| Certification / Requirement | Type | Main Function | Applicable Products | Is it common/important in North America? | Is it usually “mandatory”? |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EPA TSCA Title VI / CARB | Regulation / material compliance | Controls formaldehyde emissions from composite wood products | Bathroom vanities, mirror cabinets, wooden cabinets, wooden furniture | Very important | For products containing regulated panels, very important for the U.S. market |
| FSC CoC | Sustainability / supply chain | Proves wood sourcing and supply-chain traceability | Wooden bathroom vanities, wood-framed mirrors, wooden storage | Very common | Usually not mandatory, but many brands/projects require it |
| cUPC / UPC | Product access / code compliance | Proves plumbing products meet relevant health and performance requirements | Faucets, basins, toilets, drains, etc. | Very important | Often a key market access requirement for relevant plumbing products |
| NSF/ANSI/CAN 61 | Health and safety | Safety of materials in contact with drinking water | Faucets, valves, water supply components | Very important | Required for many products in contact with drinking water |
| NSF/ANSI/CAN 372 | Lead-free / low-lead | Verifies lead-content compliance with lead-free requirements | Faucets, valves, accessories | Very important | Common requirement for North American drinking-water-contact products |
| WaterSense | Water-saving label | Proves water efficiency and independent certification | Bathroom faucets, etc. | Common | Usually not absolutely mandatory, but high-value for retail and projects |
| UL / ETL / CSA | Electrical safety | Electrical safety compliance for powered products | LED mirrors, smart mirrors, mirror lights | Very important | Usually very important for electrical products |
| GREENGUARD / Indoor Advantage Gold | IAQ / low VOC | Low chemical emissions, improved environmental positioning | Bathroom vanities, mirror cabinets, interior building materials | Common in mid-to-high-end markets | Not mandatory |
| Prop 65 | California warning regulation | Chemical exposure warning | Furniture, wood products, some accessories | Very common in California | Depends on the exposure assessment result |
| ADA | Design compliance | Accessibility dimensions and reach requirements | Commercial / hotel / public-space vanities and bathroom spaces | Important for projects | May be mandatory for specific projects |
The above distinctions are based on official information from EPA, CARB, FSC, IAPMO, NSF, EPA WaterSense, UL/ETL, and ADA.
This section is very practical. Not all buyers need the same set of documents.
They usually request:
What they care about most is: controlled risk, sellable on platforms, accepted into warehouses, and traceable accountability in the event of claims.
They are usually stricter than ordinary importers and may also require:
They often do not only look at “whether there is a certificate,” but also at whether it is real, whether it is valid, and whether it exactly matches the current model.
They usually focus on:
They care more about whether the product can be sold, whether it is easy to sell, and whether it may be returned or fail spot checks.
They usually additionally care about:
Project buyers are not just buying the product; they are also buying reduced installation risk, acceptance risk, and maintenance risk.
They usually focus most on:
What these customers fear most is account risk control, product removal, bad reviews, and fake certificate issues.
This part is extremely important. In B2B procurement, many problems are not “no certificate,” but rather “the certificate is not real” or “the certificate does not correspond.”
The most direct method is to search the IAPMO Product Listing Directory by:
If the supplier provides you with a cUPC certificate, but you cannot find the corresponding model, company name, or status in the official IAPMO directory, you should be highly cautious. IAPMO also officially encourages the industry to verify cUPC marks.
Use FSC Public Search / FSC Search to check:
Special attention should be paid to this point:
Having an FSC certificate ≠ this batch of goods can necessarily carry an FSC claim.
You must also verify whether the certificate is valid, whether the certificate holder is the seller, and whether the product falls within the scope of the certificate.
Use UL Product iQ to search for product or certification information. UL officially states that Product iQ can be used to verify UL certifications.
Ask the supplier to provide Intertek listing information, report number, and product label photos, and verify whether the manufacturer, model, and electrical parameters are consistent. As an NRTL mark, ETL is widely accepted in North America by regulators.
Focus on checking:
From the perspective of a professional manufacturer, I would give B2B buyers the following suggestions:
Do not just ask, “Do you have certificates?”
Break it down into:
This is the most basic step, and also the one most easily overlooked.
Many suppliers will give you:
What truly has value is not whether the PDF looks nice, but:
Many problems in vanity combination projects come precisely from this:
It is recommended to require at least:
Especially in the CARB / TSCA area.
If a supplier still only says “we are CARB certified,” but cannot provide the currently applicable TSCA Title VI-related materials, that indicates their compliance understanding may already be outdated.
I recommend dividing product lines into three levels:
This is the most helpful for controlling costs and building a pricing logic.
You can directly ask suppliers for this checklist:
If we explain this thoroughly, it really comes down to one sentence:
The “certification” of bathroom products is not a single certificate, but a layered system.
For bathroom vanities, the most critical ones are:
For sanitary ware and accessories, the most critical ones are:
For B2B buyers, the truly professional procurement approach is not to ask, “Do you have certifications?” but rather:
Which component corresponds to which certification; whether the certificate can be verified in the official system; and whether the model, label, and mass-production version are all consistent.
That is the real way to reduce risk and protect projects and distribution channels.
Persona de contacto: Rita Luo
Correo electrónico:info@shklbathroom.com
Correo electrónico:info@shkl.cc
Teléfono: +86 0757 82583932
Fax: +86 0757 82583936
WhatsApp: +86 139 299 10217
Foshan SHKL Sanitarios Co., Ltd.