United States: FCC released open meeting schedule for April, intending to completely cancel the authorization of non-MRA national laboratories


On April 9, 2026, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) released its agenda for its April open meeting, in which the agenda called Device Testing proposed to completely cancel the authorization of non-MRA national laboratories, the main contents of which are as follows: 

  • Implementation Phase Measures: The FCC clarifies a number of measures that can be implemented under the existing FCC regulatory framework, including: requiring authorized testing and certification bodies to report the number of employees and locations of business; improve the market supervision procedures after the equipment is launched; further strengthen the law enforcement mechanism; Establish confidential reporting channels to encourage industry participants to report potential breaches or alleged security threats.
  • Proposed Executive Order: FCC will provide a Fast Track for Pre-Approval Guidance (PAG) of equipment tested by "trusted laboratories" in the United States or its MRA countries; The FCC will require relevant testing and certification bodies to clearly disclose the location and number of employees participating in FCC certification activities. The executive order will take effect one month after it is published on the Federal Register after it is passed by the FCC at the end of this month.
  • Proposed to solicit public comment on the abolition of non-MRA national laboratories: The FCC proposed to completely ban all testing laboratories and certification bodies in countries that have not signed MRA or other equivalent reciprocal trade agreements with the United States. The FCC is also considering a transition period for this change, during which the FCC recommends charging manufacturers $20,000 for each certification test conducted at a non-MRA laboratory. The above proposals will go through the open meeting at the end of April, the publicity of the federal release website, the FCC drafting a draft executive order, and a re-vote and release, and even if there is little resistance, it is expected that it will still take six months or more to take effect.

Click this link to view the original FCC proposal.