FDA, LFGB, EU, Prop 65 and GRS — what each means and which your market requires.
Importing drinkware means proving it's safe for food contact. But buyers are often handed a stack of certificate names with no explanation. Here's what FDA, LFGB, EU 1935/2004, California Prop 65, and GRS actually mean, and which ones your market requires.

The US FDA standard (21 CFR) governs food-contact materials. For stainless steel and plastic drinkware sold in the US, FDA compliance is the baseline. It tests that materials don't leach harmful substances into your drink.
LFGB is Germany's food-safety standard — stricter than the general EU rule and widely treated as a premium benchmark across Europe. If you sell into Germany or want a strong EU compliance signal, ask for LFGB.

This is the framework regulation for all food-contact materials sold in the European Union. It's the EU baseline; LFGB sits on top of it for the German market.

California's Proposition 65 requires warnings about specific chemicals. For drinkware sold into California — effectively, the whole US market — Prop 65 compliance avoids costly legal exposure.
The Global Recycled Standard certifies recycled content and a responsible supply chain. If your brand is positioned on sustainability, GRS substantiates recycled-material claims credibly.
Jupeng holds all of these and provides the test reports up front. Download our certifications — no "we'll send it later."
Interested in sourcing drinkware from Jupeng? WhatsApp Beyond directly — factory-direct pricing, all certifications ready, 30-day production. Response within 24 hours.
Written by the Jupeng Drinkware team — Yongkang, Zhejiang, China. Manufacturing drinkware since 1998. Contact Beyond: info@jupengcup.com | WhatsApp +86 156 5791 8881
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