According to the US Fire Statistics, more than half of all home fires occur between 10 PM and 6 AM when most of us are sound asleep. This is the very reason why the US Consumer Products and Safety Commission issued specific regulations on children’s sleepwear. But what are the laws exactly? 

The Code of Federal Regulations rules that children’s sleepwear and loungewear should be flame resistant and self-extinguish if it catches fire from a candle, match, lighter, or similar item.

The US Regulations on Children’s Sleepwear

As defined in the Code of Federal Regulations in 16 CFR Part 1615 and 1616, children’s sleepwear is intended to be worn primarily for sleeping or any activities related to sleeping. (Source: CPSC)

Further on, there are determinants if the article of clothing is sleepwear:

The two regulations, Part 1615 and 1616, are similar, except for the sizing of the sleepwear. 1615 refers to sleepwear sized above nine months up to 6X, while 1616 refers to sleepwear sized 7X up to 14X. In these regulations, sleepwear is required to:

The flammability test is designed to ensure the safety of children if the garment catches fire. It should pass several requirements as dictated by the test criteria of the regulations. (Source: Cornell Law)

Sleepwear should be tight fitting to lessen the oxygen between the child’s skin and the garment and avoid feeding the flame. To determine tight-fitting sleepwear, it should meet the following requirements:

Marketing Responsibilities

To further safeguard children’s safety against their sleepwear accidentally catching fire, retailers, distributors, and wholesalers are required to:

Avoid advertising garments or fabrics that do not comply with the regulation in a manner that may cause the consumer to see the item as sleepwear. (Source: CPSC)