An official website of the United States government.

This is not the current EPA website. To navigate to the current EPA website, please go to www.epa.gov. This website is historical material reflecting the EPA website as it existed on January 19, 2021. This website is no longer updated and links to external websites and some internal pages may not work. More information »

Chemical Data Reporting

Determining if You Are a Manufacturer or Importer Required to Report

Return to Table of Contents

  1. Production Volume Thresholds
  2. Small Manufacturers

    Top of Page

    • 14.1. Are small manufacturers exempt from CDR reporting requirements?

      Usually, yes. A submitter meeting either of the following standards (40 CFR 704.3) would be considered a small manufacturer and generally exempt from CDR reporting if:

      • Total sales during the principal reporting year, combined with those of the parent company, domestic or foreign (if any), are less than $12 million regardless of annual production volume.
      • Total sales during the principal reporting year, combined with those of the parent company, domestic or foreign (if any), are less than $120 million and your annual production volume of that chemical substance does not exceed 100,000 pounds at any individual plant site. If the annual production volume of the chemical substance at any particular site is more than 100,000 pounds, the submitter is required to report for that particular site.

      Note that under the second standard, it is possible to qualify as a small manufacturer with respect to some chemical substances and not others or with respect to some sites and not others.

      For purposes of the definition of a small manufacturer, total annual sales include all sales of the company, not just the total sales of a given chemical substance (40 CFR 704.3).

    • 14.2. There have been changes to the definition for Small Manufacturers. Will the 100,000 pounds threshold still apply to the small business entities?

      Yes. The 100,000 pounds threshold is applied as follows (40 CFR 704.3):

      You are exempt from reporting as a small manufacturer if:  

      • Total sales during the principal reporting year, combined with those of the parent company, domestic or foreign (if any), are less than $12 million regardless of annual production volume. Total sales during the principal reporting year, combined with those of the parent company, domestic or foreign (if any), are less than $120 million and your annual production volume of that chemical substance does not exceed 100,000 pounds at any individual plant site. If the annual production volume of the chemical substance at any particular site is more than 100,000 pounds, the submitter is required to report for that particular site, unless the submitter meets the first standard.
      • Total sales during the principal reporting year, combined with those of the parent company, domestic or foreign (if any), are less than $12 million regardless of annual production volume.
    • 14.3. Are small governments also exempt from reporting under CDR?

      Yes, small governments are also exempt from reporting under CDR. In May 2020, EPA finalized the Small Manufacturer Definition Update for TSCA Section 8(a) rule, which added a small government definition. For purposes of CDR, a manufacturing site that is owned by a small government is not required to report manufactured (including imported) chemical substances. Small government means the government of a city, county, town, township, village, school district, or special district with a population of less than 50,000. (40 CFR 704.3)

    • 14.4. Are there any situations where small manufacturers are not exempt and may be subject to CDR reporting?

      Yes. The exemption for small businesses does not apply to persons who manufacture (including import) a chemical substance that is the subject of a rule proposed or promulgated under Section 4, 5(b)(4), or 6 of TSCA; or is the subject of an order in effect under Section 4 or 5(e) of TSCA; or is the subject of relief that has been granted under a civil action under Section 5 or 7 of TSCA (40 CFR 711.9). In such circumstances, the volume thresholds for reporting found in §711.8 apply.

    • 14.5. When evaluating my small business exemption status with respect to production volume being less than 100,000 pounds, do I consider each chemical substance separately or all of my chemicals together?

      You determine your status as a small manufacturer on a chemical-by-chemical basis, taking into account the total sales of the company. Therefore, if your company has total sales of $12 million or over but under $120 million and manufactured 35,000 pounds of Chemical A, 140,000 pounds of Chemical B, and 95,000 pounds of Chemical C, your company qualifies for small manufacturer status with respect to Chemicals A and C, but not Chemical B. Note that, if Chemical A or C is subject to any of certain TSCA actions, your company would be required to report for that chemical, notwithstanding its small manufacturer status.

    • 14.6. If a company qualifies as a small manufacturer, should that information be sent to EPA?

      No. A company does not need to send the information regarding qualifying as a small manufacturer to EPA.

    • 14.7. To determine if we qualify as a small manufacturer, when calculating total annual sales of a parent company, should we only add sales of the domestic parent company or are sales of the foreign parent company included too?

      To determine whether you meet the small manufacturer definition, calculate total sales for the entire company, including the sales of a foreign parent company. In the definition of a small manufacturer, in 40 CFR 704.3, a parent company is defined more broadly geographically than the definition of U.S. parent company.

  3. Certain Regulated Chemical Substances
  4. Small Quantities for Research and Development
  5. Imported Articles
  6. Impurities
  7. Non-Isolated Intermediates