Foreign governments importing U.S. dietary supplements typically require an FDA Export Certificate. The process and form differ from conventional food — supplements use FDA's dietary supplement export channel. We handle the full request on your behalf.
What's Included:
Dietary supplement export certificate request preparation
Submission via FDA's supplement export certification system
Coordination with FDA for clarification on product formulation or claims
Delivered within 10–15 business days from FDA acceptance
Reference copy for your records
Who It's For:
U.S. dietary supplement manufacturers or exporters whose foreign buyers or destination-country regulators require an FDA-issued export certificate. Common in markets that distinguish supplements from conventional food (most of Europe, parts of Asia, and Latin America).
FAQs:
Q: Why is the supplements process different from food?
A: FDA regulates supplements under DSHEA, which has different labeling and structure-function claim rules than conventional food. Export certificates reflect that regulatory distinction.
Q: My product is a "functional food" — which certificate do I need?
A: Depends on FDA's classification. If your label uses "Supplement Facts" and structure-function claims, it's a supplement. If it uses "Nutrition Facts" and only general food claims, it's conventional food. We confirm during intake.
Q: Can I get certificates for multiple products in one order?
A: Each product requires its own certificate. Email info@usimports.us for multi-product pricing.
Foreign governments importing U.S. dietary supplements typically require an FDA Export Certificate. The process and form differ from conventional food — supplements use FDA's dietary supplement export channel. We handle the full request on your behalf.
What's Included:
Dietary supplement export certificate request preparation
Submission via FDA's supplement export certification system
Coordination with FDA for clarification on product formulation or claims
Delivered within 10–15 business days from FDA acceptance
Reference copy for your records
Who It's For:
U.S. dietary supplement manufacturers or exporters whose foreign buyers or destination-country regulators require an FDA-issued export certificate. Common in markets that distinguish supplements from conventional food (most of Europe, parts of Asia, and Latin America).
FAQs:
Q: Why is the supplements process different from food?
A: FDA regulates supplements under DSHEA, which has different labeling and structure-function claim rules than conventional food. Export certificates reflect that regulatory distinction.
Q: My product is a "functional food" — which certificate do I need?
A: Depends on FDA's classification. If your label uses "Supplement Facts" and structure-function claims, it's a supplement. If it uses "Nutrition Facts" and only general food claims, it's conventional food. We confirm during intake.
Q: Can I get certificates for multiple products in one order?
A: Each product requires its own certificate. Email info@usimports.us for multi-product pricing.