1507050854
SAA certification of household appliances
What certification does household appliances export to Australia?
A: SAA certification for household appliances. Before entering the markets of Australia and New Zealand, electrical safety certification (SAA certification) must be carried out for household appliances such as electric fans, Yuba, massagers, etc., and the approved certificate number and compliance mark must be marked, otherwise it will be regarded as a criminal industry. In order to help Chinese enterprises enter the Australian market quickly and at low cost, we have completed testing and technical data preparation in the mainland.
SAA standards for household appliances: as / nzs60335-2-15, as / nzs60335-2-29, as / nzs60335-2-30, as / nzs60335-2-32, as / nzs60335-2-80, as / nzs60335-2-40, etc
SAA certification process of household appliances: (1) product inquiry (2) application for contract signing (provision of samples and technical data) (3) product testing (4) report approval (5) issuing officer issuing certificate (6) follow-up supervision services.
For SAA certification of home appliances, if you need to consult more information or quotation, please send product information (product name, product picture, specification, model and difference), company information (company name, contact person and contact number) to online professional customer service for consultation!
How much is SAA certification for home appliances and how long is it?
Answer: SAA certification of household appliances - certification cycle
In general, the period for applying for Australian SAA certification for common products of it AV lamps and small household appliances is 3-4 weeks. If the product quality does not meet the standard, the date may be extended.
When submitting the report to Australia for audit, it is necessary to provide SAA certificate of product plug (mainly for products with plug), otherwise it will not be handled. SAA certificate of important components in the product, such as lamps, needs to provide SAA certificate of transformer in lamps, otherwise the Australian audit data will not pass.