City
Epaper

CCPA slaps Rs 5 lakh fine on Snapdeal for selling non-BIS compliant toys, warns others

By IANS | Updated: February 16, 2026 16:55 IST

New Delhi, Feb 16 The Central Consumer Protection Authority (CCPA) on Monday imposed a penalty of Rs 5 ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Feb 16 The Central Consumer Protection Authority (CCPA) on Monday imposed a penalty of Rs 5 lakh on Snapdeal for the sale of non-BIS compliant toys on its platform, in violation of consumer rights.

The regulator said it has taken strict action against e-commerce entities and sellers for the sale of toys in violation of the mandatory Toys (Quality Control) Order, 2020 and prescribed Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) standards.

In this regard, the CCPA imposed the penalty on Snapdeal (Ace Vector Limited) “for engaging in unfair trade practices and misleading advertisements by facilitating the sale of non-BIS compliant toys on its platform”.

The CCPA, led by Chief Commissioner Nidhi Khare and Commissioner Anupam Mishra, issued a final order against Snapdeal, according to a statement by Ministry of Consumer Affairs.

According to the regulator, Snapdeal earned fees amounting to Rs 41,032 from the sale of these non-compliant toys through just two identified sellers: Stallion Trading Company and Thriftkart.

Many listings lacked essential information, such as the manufacturer's name, address, and mandatory BIS certification numbers. The platform relied solely on seller self-declarations without independent verification, which the CCPA deemed ‘inadequate’ for preventing the listing of hazardous products.

“Snapdeal took its defence as it acts as a ‘marketplace e-commerce entity’ similar to a physical shopping mall,” said the CCPA.

The agency categorically rejected this analogy, noting that Snapdeal exerts "substantial control" over transactions by managing platform-wide promotional sales like "Toofan Sale" and "Deal of the Day", and tagging products with quality assurances such as "great quality at best price," which acts as a false guarantee when applied to non-compliant BIS standard goods.

“The onus is on the platform to ensure that every listed product meets the safety and quality standards such as the BIS certification for toys and it remains vicariously liable for any deficiency in service or defect in goods that reach the consumers through its portal,” said the watchdog.

The CCPA further noted that when enquired about providing a guarantee for sale of BIS compliant toys on its platform in future, the opposite party failed to provide a guarantee or categorical undertaking that henceforth listings or exhibition of non-BIS complaint toys would not reappear on the platform.

The CCPA had issued notices to e-commerce entities and the sellers such as Amazon, Flipkart and Snapdeal, stallion trading company, electronics bazar store etc. for sale of toys in violation to QCO and BIS standards directed for compulsory use by the Central Government.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

EntertainmentDhurandhar 2 Box Office Collection Day 23: Ranveer Singh’s Film Crosses Rs 1,055 Crore in India; Check Day-Wise Earnings Report

InternationalTrump warns of US strike on Iran with "best weapons" if talks fail

CricketSooryavanshi, Jurel help RR win by 6 wickets, hand RCB their first loss of IPL 2026

CricketIPL 2026 Standings: Updated Points Table After Rajasthan Royals vs Royal Challengers Bengaluru​​​​​​​ Match

Other SportsIPL 2026: The way Vaibhav batted made all the difference, says RCB captain Patidar

Business Realted Stories

BusinessTripura emerges fastest-growing economies in NE, attracts Rs 2,000 cr investment interest at Bengaluru conclave

Business4.05 lakh PNG connections gasified, not LPG: Petroleum Ministry

BusinessUltra Gas to invest Rs. 900 crores to expand LNG Infra amid West Asia crisis: MD, Maqsood Sheikh

BusinessNITI Aayog releases reports on Ease of Doing R&D​

BusinessTimely intervention cleared 90 pc cargo backlog amid Strait of Hormuz disruptions: Minister