KEY POINTS
  • Some Amazon third-party sellers are only asked to submit safety documents weeks after they start selling, leaving Amazon's marketplace open to a flood of potentially unsafe products, CNBC has learned.
  • Amazon told a group of toy sellers in recent weeks to submit the "required safety documentation" for products that were already available for sale.
  • The policy is likely set up this way to speed up the listing process and quickly expand product selection on Amazon, experts say.
A worker assembles a box for delivery at the Amazon fulfillment center in Baltimore, Maryland, April 30, 2019

Amazon says toy sellers have to be safety compliant if they want to sell on its marketplace. But some sellers are not asked to submit safety documents until weeks after they start selling, leaving Amazon's marketplace open to potentially unsafe products, CNBC has learned.

Amazon reached out to a group of new toy sellers in recent weeks, asking them to submit the "required safety documentation" for toys that were already available for sale, according to an email seen by CNBC. Amazon said the submissions had to be made no later than September 9th, 2019 — roughly two weeks after these sellers started selling those products. The sellers who spoke to CNBC said they were not asked to submit the safety documents prior to listing on the site. Several sellers have previously mentioned receiving the same type of email in Amazon's seller forum.