Toys and children’s products need FCC/CPSIA documentation on top of invoices because Amazon has to prove legal safety compliance, not just supply-chain legitimacy.
Invoices only show who you bought from and what you bought; they say nothing about whether the product is safe for kids. CPSIA and related rules (like ASTM F963) are U.S. federal law for children’s products, covering things like lead limits, phthalates, small parts, mechanical hazards, and labeling. A Children’s Product Certificate (CPC) and lab test reports from a CPSC‑accepted lab are what actually prove the toy meets those standards, so Amazon demands them before or after listing approval.
For toys, Amazon typically expects:
ASTM F963 toy safety test reports
CPSIA heavy metal/phthalate testing
A CPC that ties those tests to the exact SKU/UPC
Proper warning labels (choking hazard, age grading) on packaging and listing (CPSIA cautionary statements field)
Without these, Amazon risks regulatory fines and product recalls, so even a perfect distributor invoice isn’t enough. That’s why ungating in Toys/Children’s products is more like a compliance project than a pure “send invoices and wait” exercise.