If you've been shopping for carpets from China, you've probably seen the OEKO-TEX logo on some product pages.Factories sometimes throw it around like a magic badge. But what does it actually mean for your order? And does it guarantee the carpet is safe?
As a export team based in Canada with direct relationships with Tianjin Wuqing factories, I help buyers understand exactly what they're getting. Let me give you the honest version.
OEKO-TEX Standard 100 is not a quality certification. It doesn't tell you if the carpet looks good, wears well, or matches your spec. It tells you one thing: the textile components have been tested for harmful substances.
The testing covers:
The critical point that many buyers miss: every component of the carpet is tested separately. The yarn, the backing, the latex layer, the dye stuff, the printing ink, the hang tag, even the adhesive used in the backing. If any single component fails, the entire product fails.
OEKO-TEX categorizes products into four classes based on skin contact level:
| Class | Description | Examples | Requirements |
|---|---|---|---|
| Product Class 1 | Infants (under 3 years) | Baby blankets, crawling mats | Most stringent — lowest substance limits |
| Product Class 2 | Textiles with skin contact | Carpets, rugs, bath mats | Second strictest — applies to most carpet categories |
| Product Class 3 | Textiles without skin contact | Curtains, wall coverings | Less stringent than Class 2 |
| Product Class 4 | Decorating materials | Furniture fabrics, mattress ticking | Least stringent requirements |
Most residential carpets and rugs fall under Product Class 2. This is important because some factories may have certification for Class 3 products but not Class 2. Always verify which class is on the certificate.
Key insight: If a factory shows you a "STANDARD 100 by OEKO-TEX" certificate, check two things: (1) Is the product class what you need? (2) Is the certificate still valid? OEKO-TEX certificates are valid for one year and must be renewed annually.
Tianjin Wuqing is one of China's oldest and largest carpet manufacturing clusters. Many of the factories there have been producing for European retailers for 15-20 years, which means they're very familiar with OEKO-TEX requirements.
The process typically works like this:
OEKO-TEX doesn't just test the final product. It traces back every substance used in manufacturing. A factory that switches to OEKO-TEX approved dyes and chemicals has already done 80% of the work. The major approved chemical suppliers in China include DyStar, Huntsman, and CHT Group.
In China, the main OEKO-TEX institutes are TESTEX (Zurich-based, with offices in Shanghai and Beijing) and Henkelin. The factory submits product samples and a detailed list of all components.
Samples are sent to an OEKO-TEX accredited laboratory. For carpets, this includes testing of pile yarn, backing material, latex adhesive, and any finish treatments. The lab tests against the limit values for Product Class 2.
Once certified, the factory undergoes an annual on-site audit to verify that production conditions haven't changed and that they're still using approved chemicals.
Technically, OEKO-TEX is a voluntary certification in Canada. There's no law requiring carpets to have it to enter the country. But here is what I see happening in the Canadian market:
This is where most buyers get caught. They take the factory's word for it. Here's how to actually verify:
Never accept a PDF certificate as proof alone. I have seen factories show outdated certificates for products that no longer have a valid certification.
The certification costs are absorbed by the factory, not passed directly to buyers. However, there are indirect costs:
| Item | Typical Impact |
|---|---|
| OEKO-TEX approved dyes | 3–8% higher dye/chemical cost |
| Annual certification fee (factory) | ~$2,000–5,000/year depending on facility |
| Testing fee per product | ~$500–1,200 per article |
| Your price premium as % | Typically 5–10% above non-certified equivalent |
For a 100-piece order of printed carpets at $3/sqm FOB, going from non-certified to OEKO-TEX certified adds roughly $0.15–0.30/sqm. For a 20ft container, that's about $150–300 additional cost for the certification assurance.
My recommendation: If you're selling to Canadian retailers or Amazon FBA buyers, always request OEKO-TEX certified products. The cost premium is minimal compared to the risk of rejected shipments or returns due to chemical concerns.
GOTS (Global Organic Textile Standard) goes further — it covers not just chemical safety but also requires that the textile fibers be organically grown (e.g., organic cotton, organic wool). OEKO-TEX doesn't care about the origin of the fiber, only the chemical safety of the finished product. For most synthetic carpets (polyester, nylon), OEKO-TEX is the relevant standard, not GOTS.
No. Fire retardancy is a separate regulation. In Canada, carpet flammability falls under the Canada Consumer Product Safety Act and related standards. In the US, it's under CPSC regulations. If you need fire-retardant treated carpets, that's a separate requirement to discuss with your factory.
Yes. You can send a sample directly to TESTEX or another OEKO-TEX accredited lab for pre-shipment testing. Costs run $200–400 per sample depending on tests required. I can arrange this as part of the quality inspection process.
OEKO-TEX certification covers the base product. Custom logo printing (using your own hang tag, packaging) may or may not be covered depending on what materials the factory uses for those items. Standard paper hang tags are typically already OEKO-TEX certified. If you're using custom fabric labels or special packaging, ask specifically.