Nowadays, tablet PCs have become mainstream digital products for household use, study and office work, and the booming market demand has driven the vigorous development of the tablet battery production and sales industry. Meanwhile, market supervision has been continuously tightened, and product safety and compliance have become the cornerstone for enterprise survival. As a core component of tablet PCs, batteries pose potential safety hazards that directly affect user experience and are a key focus of regulatory inspections.
With the vigorous development of cross-border e-commerce, compact and portable Bluetooth speakers have become popular digital products for export to Japan. The Japanese market imposes extremely strict safety standards on imported electronic products, and the safety compliance of built-in batteries is a core assessment item for market access. Many foreign trade merchants often suffer from customs detention, failed clearance and store penalties due to neglecting PSE certification for batteries, thus missing out on market business opportunities. For enterprises exporting Bluetooth speakers, obtaining PSE certification for batteries is not an optional extra, but a basic prerequisite to take root in the Japanese market and operate in compliance with regulations.
As a best-selling product in South Korea’s maternity and children’s toy market, smart children’s remote control cars are widely loved by local families and kids for their fun operation, intelligent interaction and diverse appearances. They are also core products for Chinese toy enterprises expanding into South Korea’s cross-border market. South Korea has strict market access rules for such electrically operated and remote-controlled children’s toys. KC Certification is the only mandatory qualification for products to complete customs clearance and go on sale legally. Products without KC Certification are prohibited from circulation in South Korea, and this certification is also a basic requirement for entering local supermarkets and e-commerce platforms.
With the continuous boom of the cross-border audio and video market, wireless speakers have become a popular export product for Chinese foreign trade enterprises selling to the EU, thanks to their portability, wireless connectivity and wide application scenarios. Many enterprises tend to overlook one key point: wireless speakers are electronic products equipped with radio frequency (RF) wireless functions. To achieve smooth sales, customs clearance and distribution within the EU market, CE Certification is an indispensable mandatory compliance requirement. It also serves as a core qualification for passing random inspections by EU customs, entering e-commerce platforms and gaining shelf access in offline supermarkets.
Wireless electronics such as Bluetooth earphones, smart watches, Wi-Fi routers and drone controllers are widely used across consumer, household, industrial and medical sectors. As a prime North American destination for foreign trade, Canada mandates compulsory ISED IC Certification for all export wireless goods. Any device operating on 2.4GHz, 5GHz or other RF bands must complete this certification to gain legal sales eligibility.
With the global popularization of smart wearable devices, children’s smartwatches featuring positioning, calling and safety monitoring have become essential parenting goods for overseas families and a core export product for domestic digital manufacturers. For enterprises expanding into the Canadian market, ISED Certification is an indispensable mandatory compliance threshold that directly determines legal product sales and is critical to overseas market development.
As the new version of the general standard IEC 60335-1:2020 is gradually implemented, the safety standard for motor-based kitchen appliances has also been updated to IEC 60335-2-14:2025. This standard will gradually replace the old version IEC 60335-2-14:2016 + AMD1:2019 and will be officially mandatory from February 7, 2027.
Recently, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) issued the latest announcement, announcing the extension of the temporary exemption period for foreign-made UAVs, UAV components and consumer-grade routers, allowing related equipment that has been approved for use in the US market to continue to receive software and firmware updates until January 1, 2029. This delay has released an important buffer signal for the industry, and also provided key guidance for the compliance and product operation and maintenance of related manufacturers around the world.
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