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Walmart Expands Scrutiny on Product Claims Across Marketplace Listings

Walmart Marketplace has updated and reinforced its Prohibited Products Policy around product claims, introducing stricter compliance expectations for sellers making claims related to environmental impact, origin labeling, textile composition, and chemical content.

The updated guidance reflects Walmart’s broader push toward marketplace transparency, regulatory alignment, and consumer protection as global regulators continue increasing oversight of online marketplaces and misleading product advertising.

Under the policy, Walmart warns that products containing inaccurate, conflicting, or prohibited claims may be unpublished from the Marketplace automatically.

The policy affects multiple categories including apparel, consumer goods, household items, beauty, packaging, and environmentally marketed products.

Key Highlights

Walmart now enforcing stricter product claim validation

According to the updated policy, all product listings on Walmart Marketplace must contain truthful and verifiable claims that comply with applicable federal, state, and local regulations.

The platform clarified that listings violating claim requirements may be removed even if the seller is otherwise compliant with Marketplace standards.

Walmart specifically highlighted product claim categories including:

  • Air purification efficacy
  • Third-party approval claims
  • Heritage origin claims
  • Jewelry and precious metal claims
  • Organic claims
  • Textile composition claims
  • Country-of-origin statements
  • Environmental sustainability claims

The update signals increased moderation of product detail pages and attribute consistency across Marketplace listings.

Made in the USA Claims Face Tighter Enforcement

One of the most significant sections of the updated policy focuses on “Made in the USA” claims.

Walmart requires full consistency across listings

Walmart now requires any “Made in the USA” statement to remain fully consistent across:

  • Product images
  • Product packaging
  • Product attributes
  • Product descriptions
  • Country-of-origin details

Listings containing conflicting information may be unpublished automatically.

Claims prohibited under the policy

Walmart stated that products cannot claim:

  • “Made in America”
  • “Manufactured in USA”
  • “Built in America”
  • “Assembled in America”
  • “Grown in the USA”

if substantial transformation of the product occurred outside the United States.

The Marketplace also prohibits listings that simultaneously include:

  • “Made in USA” claims, and
  • Imported origin disclosures or foreign country references

FTC alignment becomes critical for sellers

Walmart clarified that sellers must comply with Federal Trade Commission (FTC) labeling standards when making U.S.-origin claims.

This means sellers may now need stronger supply chain documentation and manufacturing verification before using origin-based marketing language.

Walmart Restricts Biodegradable and Compostable Claims

The updated policy also places major restrictions on environmental marketing claims.

Consumer products with biodegradable or compostable claims restricted

Walmart Marketplace now restricts products making claims such as:

  • Biodegradable
  • Compostable
  • Degradable
  • Decomposable
    including variations of those terms.

The restriction applies both to:

  • Product descriptions
  • Product packaging claims

Environmental marketing scrutiny continues to grow

The policy reflects increasing regulatory concern around “greenwashing” and unverified sustainability marketing claims across eCommerce marketplaces.

Environmental product claims have become a growing legal and compliance issue globally, particularly in:

  • The United States
  • European Union markets
  • California state regulations
  • FTC Green Guides enforcement

Walmart’s stricter approach indicates marketplaces are becoming more proactive in policing sustainability terminology before regulatory intervention occurs.

Textile Compliance Requirements Reinforced

Walmart also reiterated that textile products sold on Marketplace must comply with FTC textile labeling regulations.

This includes accurate disclosure of:

  • Fiber composition
  • Fabric percentages
  • Textile material identification
  • Labeling standards

The update is particularly relevant for:

  • Apparel sellers
  • Fashion brands
  • Home textile merchants
  • Private-label manufacturers
  • Cross-border apparel exporters

Improper textile labeling can now increase the risk of listing suppression or removal.

“Forever Chemicals” Now Explicitly Restricted

Another major addition is Walmart’s direct restriction on products containing certain “forever chemicals.”

Chemicals specifically referenced include:

  • PFAS
  • PFOS
  • PTFE
  • PFOA

and other related chemical compounds commonly referred to as forever chemicals.

Growing marketplace regulation around PFAS

PFAS-related restrictions have become a major regulatory trend across:

  • Consumer goods
  • Kitchenware
  • Cosmetics
  • Apparel
  • Packaging
  • Waterproof materials

Governments and regulators globally are increasingly targeting these substances due to concerns around environmental persistence and potential health risks.

Walmart’s inclusion of explicit PFAS-related restrictions signals tighter chemical compliance expectations for Marketplace sellers moving forward.

Why This Matters for Marketplace Sellers

The policy update signals a broader shift in how marketplaces manage product compliance and seller accountability.

Sellers may now face:

  • Automatic item unpublishing
  • Listing suspensions
  • Compliance review delays
  • Increased documentation requirements

particularly if product claims conflict across listing fields or violate restricted terminology rules.

Cross-border sellers face higher scrutiny

The update may especially impact:

  • Importers
  • White-label sellers
  • Cross-border marketplace merchants
  • Dropshipping operations
  • Overseas manufacturers

where origin claims, packaging language, or environmental marketing statements may not align with Walmart’s standards.

Product content accuracy becomes operationally critical

Marketplace sellers may now need stronger coordination across:

  • Product packaging teams
  • Compliance departments
  • Marketplace listing operations
  • Manufacturers
  • Supply chain partners

to ensure all product claims remain consistent and legally defensible.

Larger Marketplace Trend: Compliance-Driven Commerce

Walmart’s updated product claims policy reflects a broader industry-wide movement toward compliance-first marketplace operations.

Major marketplaces including:

  • Amazon
  • eBay
  • Temu
  • SHEIN

have all faced increasing scrutiny over:

  • Product safety
  • Misleading claims
  • Sustainability marketing
  • Counterfeit risks
  • Cross-border compliance
  • Consumer transparency

Regulators are increasingly expecting marketplaces themselves—not just sellers—to take responsibility for monitoring listing accuracy and prohibited claims.

Seller Impact

Marketplace sellers operating on Walmart should now review:

  • Product titles
  • Bullet points
  • Packaging claims
  • Product images
  • Attribute fields
  • Country-of-origin data
  • Sustainability terminology
  • Material disclosures

to ensure alignment with Walmart’s updated standards.

Sellers using AI-generated listings, bulk catalog uploads, or syndicated product data may face elevated risk if conflicting claims appear across different listing sections.

Conclusion

Walmart Marketplace’s updated Product Claims Policy marks another significant step toward stricter marketplace compliance enforcement. By targeting misleading origin claims, unverified environmental language, textile inaccuracies, and PFAS-related products, Walmart is signaling that product transparency and regulatory alignment are becoming central requirements for marketplace participation.

For sellers, the update reinforces that compliance is no longer limited to restricted product categories alone. Product wording, packaging language, sustainability terminology, and supply chain accuracy are now increasingly tied directly to marketplace visibility and listing survival.

Source: https://marketplacelearn.walmart.com/guides/prohibited-products-policy-product-claims

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cedcommerce news 2026 ecommerce industry news Walmart news 2026