SA DEADLINE: 20 SEP 2026

Children's Toys — Phase 1

Toy Import Safety Standards & PVoC Requirements

Phase 1 goods from Mainland China require a Certificate of Conformity (CoC) issued by an accredited inspection body before they ship. From 20 September 2026, SARS Customs and the Border Management Authority (BMA) will refuse clearance for any Phase 1 shipment without a valid CoC.

Quick Facts

Phase 1 Category

Children's toys (mandatory)

SANS Code

SANS 10436 (ISO 8124) — VERIFIED

Typical CIF Range

R150k–R1.5M per shipment

Minting Fee Example

R3,000–R30,000 (2% tier)

Inspection Bodies

CCIC, SGS, Intertek, Bureau Veritas

Gazette

GG 54374 · 20 March 2026

Mandatory Deadline

20 Sep 2026 · 142 Days

Phase 1 Scope

What Toy Products Are in Scope

Phase 1 covers children's toys and related products imported from Mainland China, including: children's toys (all categories — mechanical, electronic, soft toys), plastic kitchenware (children's plates, cups, cutlery), toy accessories and parts, and educational toys and games. The applicable SANS code is SANS 10436, which is the South African equivalent of ISO 8124 (Safety of Toys).

SANS Reference

Applicable SANS Standards

The primary SANS code for toys is SANS 10436, which is based on ISO 8124 (Safety of Toys). It covers mechanical and physical properties, flammability, chemical migration, and electrical safety for battery-operated toys. Note: SANS 10436 is the correct standard for toys. Do not confuse it with SANS 51 (electrical cable standard) or SANS 50071 (which does not exist for toys). For the authoritative SANS code reference, visit sansstandards.co.za.

Structural Comparison

With CoC vs Without CoC

AttributeWithout CoCWith CoC (Registered on Vault)
CoC StatusNo CoC — goods held at portValid CoC — goods cleared
Port DelayR3,000–R8,000/day demurrageNo delay — SAD500 clears
Penalty RiskPotential 15% CIF surcharge (East African precedent)No penalty
Document RetentionNon-compliant — Customs Act §101 not satisfied5-year encrypted retention
Verification MethodPaper-based, manual, slowQR code scan — verified in seconds
Clearing Agent WorkflowSAD500 rejected — goods heldVerification URL in SAD500 — cleared

Frequently Asked Questions

Common Questions

Does my toy shipment need a CoC?

Yes. Children's toys imported from China are in scope for Phase 1 PVoC. The applicable standard is SANS 10436 (based on ISO 8124). Your inspection body (CCIC, SGS, Intertek, or Bureau Veritas) must verify the toys against this standard before they ship from China.

What about plastic kitchenware for children?

Yes. Plastic kitchenware designed for children (plates, cups, cutlery) imported from China is in scope. SANS 10436 covers chemical migration requirements relevant to food-contact plastics.

My toys already have CE marking — does that replace the CoC?

No. CE marks satisfy European toy safety requirements (EN 71). They do not automatically satisfy South African SANS 10436 requirements. The inspection body will review your CE documentation as supporting evidence, but the CoC must still be issued for each shipment.

What is the correct SANS code for toys?

SANS 10436, which is based on ISO 8124. Do not use SANS 51 (an electrical cable standard) or any other code. If your inspection body or supplier mentions a different SANS code for toys, verify it against sansstandards.co.za.

Minting Fee Worked Example

What Does a Toys CoC Cost to Register?

The CoC Vault minting fee is tiered based on the declared CIF value of the shipment. For a typical commercial toy shipment from China:

Shipment CIF ValueTierMinting Fee
R200,000 (small toy order)2% tierR4,000
R500,000 (medium toy order)2% tierR10,000
R900,000 (large toy order)2% tierR18,000
R1,500,000 (bulk toy import)1% tierR15,000

CIF tiers: ≤R1M = 2%, R1M–R10M = 1%, R10M–R100M = 0.5%. The R1,997 onboarding fee is a one-time payment per importer entity — not per shipment.

Common Inspection Failures

Toys Inspection Pitfalls to Avoid

Small parts not tested for choking hazard

SANS 10436 requires testing for small parts that could pose a choking hazard for children under 36 months. Toys with detachable small parts must be tested. This is the most common failure point for toy CoCs.

Chemical migration limits exceeded

SANS 10436 sets limits for chemical migration from toy materials (heavy metals, phthalates, etc.). Products using non-compliant paints or plastics will fail. Verify material composition with your supplier before ordering.

Wrong SANS code cited

SANS 10436 is the correct standard for toys. Some inspection bodies or suppliers may cite SANS 71 (an older standard) or ISO 8124 directly. Ensure the CoC specifically references SANS 10436.

Age labelling missing or incorrect

SANS 10436 requires age-appropriate labelling (e.g., 'Not suitable for children under 3 years') on toys with small parts. Missing or incorrect age labelling will prevent the CoC from being issued.

Continue Learning

Register Your Toy Import Entity

R1,997 one-time onboarding. Each CoC registration takes minutes. Have your vault active before 20 September 2026.

Verify with official sources: Government Gazette No. 54374 (20 March 2026). sansstandards.co.za for applicable SANS codes. This article reflects the regulatory position as at 30 April 2026 and should not be relied upon as legal advice.

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Infrastructure Architect

Anthony James Peacock

A LinkDaddy® Industrial Build — Sovereign Project. 100% Client Data & Code Ownership. Engineered for Recursive Authority.

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LinkDaddy® LLC is a Florida-registered US entity. “Certificates of Conformity” is an independent reference publication and vault infrastructure covering South African import compliance, operated as part of the LinkDaddy® regulatory infrastructure network. Not affiliated with or endorsed by the SABS, NRCS, SARS, or any agency of the Government of South Africa.

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