On 23 February 2026, the World Trade Organisation (WTO) circulated TBT notification on behalf of the notifying member Israel (Ministry of Economy and Industry). The notification concerns a proposed amendment to the Standards Law introducing a major regulatory reform pursuant to Government Decision No. 3386.
The reform applies to consumer goods subject to mandatory Israeli standards, including:
i. Children's and baby products
ii. Cleaning products and hazardous materials for public/retail use (excluding items requiring a toxic permit from the Ministry of Environmental Protection)
iii. Pressure cookers, bicycle helmets, lighters, etc.
iv. Plastic, ceramic, and glass materials in contact with food and beverages
v. Sunglasses and metal frames for glasses
vi. Ladders and stools
vii. Vehicle restraint devices
The amendment adds an alternative compliance route allowing import and production of the listed products if they are manufactured in the United States or Israel and conform to the relevant U.S. Federal Regulations (specified in CFR titles). This reduces pre-import regulatory requirements and shifts focus to risk-based market surveillance.
Main Legislative Changes
1. Addition of Chapter D2 to the Standards Law for the adoption of U.S. Federal Regulations.
2. New Annex 8 listing adopted U.S. regulations with product-specific technical requirements:
a) Title 16 CFR (Commercial Practices): Children's/baby products, cleaning/hazardous materials, pressure cookers, bicycle helmets, lighters, etc.
b) Title 21 CFR (Food and Drugs): Food-contact materials, sunglasses/metal frames.
c) Title 29 CFR (Labour): Cleaning/hazardous materials, ladders/stools.
d) Title 49 CFR (Transportation): Vehicle restraint devices.
e) Title 40 CFR (Environment): Cleaning/hazardous retail products (excluding toxic-permit items).
3. New Annexes 9 (violations – currently empty) and 10 (secondary legislation – currently empty).
4. Indirect amendment to the Import and Export Decree to incorporate the reform.
Objective and Rationale: Harmonisation with U.S. standards; reduction of trade barriers; facilitation of trade; cost savings; and productivity enhancement.
Final date for comments: 24 April 2026.