CPSC Updates Safety Standards for Infant and Cradle Swings (16 CFR 1223)

Effective July 25, 2026, New ASTM F2088-25 Mandates Enhanced Safety & Labeling

On April 20, 2026, the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) issued a direct final rule to update the mandatory safety standard for infant and cradle swings, codified at 16 CFR 1223. This rule, which takes effect on July 25, 2026, aligns the federal regulation with the latest voluntary safety standard: ASTM F2088-25, Standard Consumer Safety Specification for Infant and Cradle Swings. Moving forward, all infant and cradle swings sold in the U.S. must comply with all applicable requirements of ASTM F2088-25, replacing the previous ASTM F2088-24 reference.

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Why This Update Matters

Infant swings are common baby products, but they carry inherent risks—including suffocation, falls, and entanglement—especially when misused (e.g., for unsupervised sleep). The CPSC’s update reflects a proactive effort to reduce preventable injuries and deaths by strengthening safety requirements and making critical warnings more visible to caregivers.

Key Changes in ASTM F2088-25 (vs. ASTM F2088-24)

The 2025 revision focuses on clarifying scope, adding critical safety testing, and improving warning label effectiveness:

1. Scope Clarification (Section 1.3)

The standard now explicitly states it does not cover stationary (non-rocking) products designed primarily for sleep. These sleep-focused products are regulated under ASTM F2194 (Consumer Safety Specification for Infant Sleep Products). This update eliminates confusion between swings (active use only) and dedicated sleep products (never use swings for unsupervised sleep).

2. New Suffocation Hazard Visibility Test (Section 7.17)

A groundbreaking new test ensures front warning labels are clearly visible to caregivers standing in front of the swing—unblocked by the infant, padding, or accessories. This addresses a critical gap: hidden warnings about suffocation risks (e.g., “Babies have suffocated when swings are used as a sleep product”) are now guaranteed to be seen before use.

3. Updated Warning Labels (Section 8.6)

Warnings have been revised for greater clarity, urgency, and readability:

  • New explicit statements: “Babies have suffocated when swings are used as a sleep product” and “Never use blankets or swaddles when using this product”.
  • Enhanced formatting: Key phrases (e.g., “ALWAYS USE RESTRAINTS”) are now bolded and capitalized to demand attention.
  • Streamlined layout: Warnings are organized to prioritize life-safety information over non-critical details.

Compliance Timeline & Next Steps

  • April 20, 2026: CPSC published the direct final rule.
  • May 20, 2026: Deadline for submitting significant adverse comments (if none received, the rule proceeds as scheduled).
  • July 25, 2026: Effective date—all infant/cradle swings manufactured or sold in the U.S. must meet ASTM F2088-25.

For manufacturers, importers, and brands:

  • Update product testing to ASTM F2088-25 before July 25, 2026.
  • Revise warning labels and packaging to reflect new content and formatting.
  • Review product design to ensure compliance with the new visibility test (Section 7.17).

Final Takeaway

The CPSC’s update to 16 CFR 1223 is a win for caregiver safety and infant protection. By aligning with ASTM F2088-25, the U.S. ensures swings meet the latest safety science—making critical warnings impossible to miss and reducing the risk of suffocation from misuse. For parents, this means greater confidence in the safety of the products they use daily; for industry, it’s a clear roadmap to compliance in the U.S. market.

Stay ahead of regulatory changes—always verify compliance with the latest CPSC and ASTM standards before manufacturing or importing infant products.