Topic:玩具
All articles tagged “玩具”, aggregated across product categories, compiled from official sources.
Toy vs Childcare Article Boundary: What Falls Under SIRIM Toy Certification and What Is Not a Toy
Among infant products, a teether counts as a toy but a feeding bottle does not. Use the single test of "is the main purpose play" to draw the line and avoid takedown for misclassification.
Malaysia Toy Phthalate Limits: How to Clear the 0.1% Line (DEHP, DBP, BBP and Mouthable Items)
The softness of soft-plastic toys, figures and bath toys mostly comes from phthalate plasticisers. In Malaysia, toys are governed by the 2009 Toy Safety Standards Regulations, with phthalates tested to MS ISO 8124-6. This article explains the six/seven restricted phthalates, the 0.1% limit, the stricter rules for mouthable items, and material-selection and testing practice.
Toy Certification Mark Size and Labelling Language: MC Mark, Registration Number, Malay/English
Passing certification is only the first step; the mark and registration number must be labelled correctly to be compliant. This article breaks down MC mark size, placement and the Malay/English language rules.
Magnet-Containing Toy Rules in Malaysia: Flux Index Limit and Warnings
Strong magnets, if swallowed, attract each other in the intestines and cause fatal injuries. Magnet-containing toys in Malaysia must meet the flux index limit of MS ISO 8124-1 and add warnings as appropriate. This article explains the test threshold and practical approach.
Electrical Toy Safety and EMC Requirements in Malaysia
Toys that move, light up or make sound must pass MS IEC 62115 electrical safety in addition to MS ISO 8124; remote-control/wireless models also need MCMC type approval. This article unpacks the full compliance chain for electrical toys in Malaysia.
Malaysia Toy E-commerce Listing Compliance: MC Mark, Certificate Upload and CPETTR 2024 Explained
Selling toys on Shopee, Lazada, TikTok Shop or your own website requires not only a SIRIM Certificate of Conformity and the MC mark, but also compliance with the 2024 Electronic Trade Transactions Regulations (CPETTR) on seller information, Malay language and certificate upload. This article covers the dual compliance of selling toys online, common takedown reasons and differences cross-border sellers should note.
Toy Consignment (Batch) Inspection: SIRIM Per-Batch Cost Structure and Timeline
Trial orders, small volumes or multi-model imported toys often go through SIRIM per-batch inspection. This article breaks down what the cost is made of, how long the timeline runs, and when to switch to type certification instead.
Button Battery Toy Safety in Malaysia: Battery Compartment Design and Warnings
Swallowed by a young child, a button or coin battery can burn through the esophagus within hours, making it one of the most serious hidden risks in toys. Toys containing button batteries must meet the battery-compartment securing requirements of MS ISO 8124-1. This article explains the design thresholds and warning practices.
Baby Toys and Teethers in Malaysia: Why "Goes in the Mouth" Makes Compliance Stricter
Teethers, teething rings, cloth books and comfort toys all count as "toys" in Malaysia, governed by the 2009 Toy Safety Standards Regulations, requiring a SIRIM Certificate of Conformity and the MC mark. Because babies bite and mouth them, the mechanical and chemical safety thresholds are higher than for general toys. This article explains classification, small parts, heavy metals and phthalates, warnings, and import/local differences.