# CSA Certified (CSA Group)

> Canadian Standards Association safety certification for electrical products. OSHA-recognized NRTL in the US and SCC-accredited in Canada. Legally equivalent to UL and ETL marks.

**Type:** certifications
**Categories:** air-fryer
**Source:** https://www.r3recs.com/learn/certifications/csa-certified

## Reality Check


## Overview

If you've been comparing [air fryers](/category/air-fryer) and noticed a blue CSA mark on some models, you might wonder how it stacks up against the more familiar UL or ETL marks. The short answer: it's legally equivalent in both the United States and Canada. Here's what parents need to know about CSA certification and what it does - and doesn't - tell you about the safety of your kitchen appliances.

## What CSA Group Is

CSA Group (originally the Canadian Standards Association) was founded in 1919 in Canada. It started as a standards-development organization focused on electrical safety, and over the past century it has grown into one of the largest testing and certification bodies in North America. CSA develops standards, operates testing laboratories, and certifies products across dozens of categories - from gas appliances and helmets to industrial equipment and household electronics.

For kitchen appliances like air fryers, CSA certification means the product was independently tested to recognized safety standards and passed. CSA is not a government agency - it is a not-for-profit membership organization that operates as an accredited third-party testing laboratory.

## How CSA Fits into the US and Canadian Regulatory System

In the United States, OSHA's Nationally Recognized Testing Laboratory (NRTL) program governs which organizations can certify electrical products for safety. CSA Group is an OSHA-recognized NRTL, alongside UL Solutions, Intertek (ETL), and roughly 20 other labs. All NRTLs test to the same published ANSI/UL safety standards. A CSA mark carries identical legal weight to a [UL Listed](/learn/certifications/ul-listed) or [ETL Certified](/learn/certifications/etl-certified) mark under the National Electrical Code (NEC Article 110.3) and OSHA regulations.

In Canada, CSA Group holds a unique position. It is accredited by the Standards Council of Canada (SCC) and is the primary standards-development organization for Canadian electrical safety. Many of the standards that UL and ETL test against in Canada were originally developed by CSA. Provincial and territorial electrical inspection authorities across Canada accept the CSA mark, and it has the deepest name recognition among Canadian consumers and inspectors.

The key takeaway for cross-border shoppers: a product with a CSA mark is accepted in both the US and Canada. If you're buying an air fryer from a Canadian retailer or seeing the CSA mark on a product sold at a US store, it satisfies the same safety listing requirements as UL or ETL.

## What CSA Certification Tests on Air Fryers

For basket-style air fryers, CSA tests to the same UL 1026 standard (Standard for Safety for Electric Household Cooking and Food Serving Appliances) that UL and ETL use. The testing covers:

**Electrical construction** - wiring, insulation, grounding, and terminal connections are evaluated to prevent shock and fire under normal use and fault conditions.

**Thermal protection** - air fryers must include thermal cutoff devices that shut down the unit if internal temperatures exceed safe thresholds.

**Leakage current** - the standard defines maximum allowable leakage current to prevent shock from insulation breakdown.

**Heating element integrity** - elements must handle rated wattage continuously without igniting surrounding materials.

**Mechanical construction** - handles, baskets, and structural components must withstand defined stress loads. Basket release mechanisms must prevent accidental drops.

**Markings** - rated voltage, wattage, model number, and manufacturer information must be clearly labeled and traceable.

CSA also conducts ongoing factory surveillance through periodic inspections, verifying that production units continue to match the tested design.

## CSA Mark Formats You'll See

CSA marks appear in several configurations:

**CSA mark (Canada only):** Certified for the Canadian market under CSA standards.

**CSA-US mark:** Certified for the US market, tested to ANSI/UL standards under CSA's OSHA NRTL recognition.

**CSA mark with US and C indicators:** Dual-certified for both markets. This is increasingly common on consumer appliances sold across North America.

The CSA mark is typically a blue logo with the letters "CSA" inside a stylized design. Look for the specific market indicators (US, C, or both) near the logo to confirm which markets the certification covers.

## Why Some Brands Choose CSA Over UL or ETL

Brand decisions about which NRTL to use are commercial, not safety-related. CSA certification is popular among:

- **Canadian-headquartered brands** that naturally work with CSA due to proximity and familiarity
- **Brands selling primarily in the Canadian market** where CSA has the strongest consumer and inspector recognition
- **Companies seeking dual US-Canada certification** in a single process, since CSA's deep roots in Canadian standards can streamline the dual-market pathway

Some brands choose CSA because their manufacturing partners already have an established relationship with CSA's testing facilities. Others use UL or ETL based on similar commercial considerations. The testing rigor is the same across all three.

## What CSA Certification Does Not Cover

This is critical for families evaluating air fryer safety.

CSA certification - like UL and ETL - is strictly an electrical and mechanical safety assessment. It does not evaluate:

- **Coating chemistry or [PFAS](/learn/ingredients/pfas) content** - a CSA-certified air fryer can still have a PTFE-coated basket
- **Food-contact material safety** - FDA 21 CFR compliance is a separate requirement that manufacturers must independently meet
- **Temperature accuracy or cooking performance** - calibration and efficiency are outside the scope
- **Long-term durability** - testing is performed on new-condition samples
- **Electromagnetic emissions** - FCC Part 15 is a separate certification

The CSA mark tells you the appliance won't shock you or catch fire under normal use. It does not tell you whether the cooking surface is free of chemicals you might want to avoid.

## How to Verify a CSA Mark

CSA Group maintains a publicly searchable product listing database. To verify a CSA mark:

1. Locate the CSA mark on the appliance label or packaging
2. Note the manufacturer name, model number, and any file or certification number near the mark
3. Visit the CSA Group Product Listing at csagroup.org/testing-certification/product-listing
4. Search by manufacturer name or model number
5. Confirm the listing exists, the model matches, and the applicable standard is shown

If you cannot find the listing, contact CSA Group before purchasing - particularly for unfamiliar brands sold on marketplace platforms. Counterfeit safety marks are a real issue in online retail.

## Cross-Border Shopping Considerations

For families who shop across the US-Canada border or order from Canadian retailers online, CSA certification simplifies things. A product with a CSA mark that includes both US and Canadian indicators is accepted by authorities in both countries. You don't need to worry about whether a Canadian-certified product is "valid" in the US - it is, through OSHA's NRTL recognition.

However, if a product carries only a Canadian CSA mark without the US indicator, confirm it also carries a US-recognized mark (UL, ETL, or CSA-US) before relying on it for US code compliance. For typical consumer air fryers sold at major North American retailers, dual-market certification is standard.

## Also Known As

- CSA mark
- CSA Listed
- CSA-US mark
- Canadian Standards Association certification
- CSA International mark

## Where Found

- Air fryer labels - typically on the underside or rear of the appliance
- Small kitchen appliances - toasters, blenders, coffee makers, pressure cookers
- Gas appliances - stoves, ovens, furnaces, water heaters
- Electrical panels, wiring devices, and outlet components
- Helmets, protective equipment, and safety gear
- Product listing pages on Amazon, Walmart, Canadian Tire, and Home Depot

## Health Concerns

CSA certification does not address health concerns directly - it is an electrical and mechanical safety standard. The health-relevant questions for air fryers (coating chemistry, PFAS content, food-contact material safety) fall outside CSA's scope. The absence of any NRTL certification on an appliance does create a direct safety risk from electrical hazards. For coating-related health concerns, see the [PFAS guide](/learn/ingredients/pfas) and [PTFE/Teflon guide](/learn/ingredients/ptfe-teflon).

## Regulatory Status

**United States:** CSA Group is recognized by OSHA as a Nationally Recognized Testing Laboratory (NRTL) under 29 CFR 1910.7. The CSA mark satisfies the 'listed' requirement under the National Electrical Code (NEC) Article 110.3 and OSHA electrical safety standards. Legally equivalent to UL and ETL marks.

**Canada:** CSA Group is accredited by the Standards Council of Canada (SCC) as both a Testing Organization and Certification Body. CSA is the primary standards-development body for Canadian electrical safety. The CSA mark is accepted by all provincial and territorial electrical inspection authorities. CSA has the deepest institutional recognition in Canada of any certification body.

**Cross-border:** Products with dual US-Canada CSA marks are accepted in both countries without additional certification.

## Label Guide

**Look for:**
- CSA mark with both US and Canada indicators - dual-market certification
- CSA-US mark - confirmed US safety listing through OSHA NRTL recognition
- Valid listing in CSA Group's product listing database
- UL Listed or ETL Listed - legally equivalent alternatives
- Certification number traceable to CSA's database

**Avoid / misleading:**
- No NRTL mark at all - uncertified appliances carry elevated electrical risk
- CE mark only - European self-declaration, not recognized by US or Canadian safety authorities
- CSA mark without US indicator if you need US compliance
- Any safety mark that cannot be verified in the issuing organization's public database

## Who Is At Risk

- Buyers of uncertified appliances from marketplace platforms who lack any independent safety testing verification
- Cross-border shoppers who assume a Canadian-only CSA mark automatically covers US compliance without checking for the US indicator
- Families who interpret CSA certification as covering coating safety or food-contact material compliance

## How To Verify

1. Locate the CSA mark on the appliance label or packaging - confirm it includes the appropriate market indicators (US, C, or both).
2. Note the manufacturer name, model number, and certification file number near the mark.
3. Visit the CSA Group Product Listing at csagroup.org/testing-certification/product-listing.
4. Search by manufacturer name or model number and confirm the listing exists and the model matches.
5. If the listing cannot be found, contact CSA Group at 1-866-463-9990 before purchasing.

For air fryers specifically, confirm the applicable standard listed is UL 1026 or the equivalent CSA standard for household cooking appliances.

## Air Fryers and CSA Certification

On [air fryers](/category/air-fryer), the CSA mark confirms the same electrical safety testing as [UL Listed](/learn/certifications/ul-listed) and [ETL Certified](/learn/certifications/etl-certified). It covers the heating element, wiring, thermal cutoffs, and mechanical construction. It does not cover basket coating chemistry. Families need to verify both electrical safety (CSA, UL, or ETL) and coating safety (PFAS-free verification) separately.

## What This Does Not Cover

Coating chemistry or PFAS/PTFE content in nonstick baskets,Food-contact material toxicology (FDA 21 CFR is a separate framework),Temperature accuracy or cooking performance,Long-term durability or coating degradation over time,FCC electromagnetic compliance (separate authorization required),Children's product chemical safety (CPSC GCC is a separate requirement),Environmental or sustainability claims

## R3 Bottom Line

- CSA Certified is legally and technically equivalent to [UL Listed](/learn/certifications/ul-listed) and [ETL Certified](/learn/certifications/etl-certified) in both the US and Canada. All three marks mean the appliance was independently tested to the same electrical safety standards by an OSHA-recognized laboratory.
- For cross-border shoppers: a CSA mark with both US and Canadian indicators is accepted in both countries. Confirm the US indicator is present if you need US compliance.
- CSA certification covers electrical safety only. It tells you nothing about basket coating chemistry, PFAS content, or food-contact material safety. For the full safety picture on [air fryers](/category/air-fryer), verify both the NRTL listing and the coating claims separately.

## FAQ

### Is CSA certification equal to UL certification?

Yes. Both CSA Group and UL Solutions are OSHA-recognized Nationally Recognized Testing Laboratories. They test to the same published safety standards. A CSA mark carries identical legal weight to a UL mark under the National Electrical Code and OSHA regulations. Local code officials, retailers, and electrical inspectors are required to accept either mark.

### Why do some air fryers have CSA instead of UL or ETL?

The choice of testing laboratory is a commercial decision, not a safety one. Brands may choose CSA because of an existing relationship with CSA's labs, because they are headquartered in Canada, or because CSA offers a streamlined dual US-Canada certification pathway. The testing rigor and applicable standards are the same regardless of which NRTL performs the work.

### Is a CSA-certified air fryer valid in the United States?

Yes, as long as the CSA mark includes the US indicator. CSA Group is an OSHA-recognized NRTL, so its US-market certification is accepted by all US authorities having jurisdiction, retailers, and electrical inspectors. Check that the mark specifically includes the US designation rather than being a Canada-only certification.

### Does CSA certification mean an air fryer basket is safe to cook with?

No. CSA certification covers electrical and mechanical safety - it confirms the appliance won't shock you, overheat, or catch fire under normal use. It does not evaluate the basket coating, PFAS content, or food-contact material safety. Those fall under separate FDA regulations. Families need to verify coating safety independently. See our [PFAS guide](/learn/ingredients/pfas) for details.

### How do I verify a CSA mark is legitimate?

Visit CSA Group's product listing database at csagroup.org and search by manufacturer name or model number. Confirm the listing exists and the model matches your product. If you cannot find the listing, contact CSA Group at 1-866-463-9990. This is especially important for lesser-known brands purchased from online marketplaces.

### What is the difference between CSA and the CE mark?

CSA certification involves independent third-party testing by an accredited laboratory. The CE mark is a manufacturer self-declaration of compliance with EU directives - no independent lab is required. The CE mark is not recognized by OSHA or Canadian safety authorities. An appliance with only a CE mark does not meet US or Canadian safety listing requirements.

### Do major US retailers accept the CSA mark?

Yes. Walmart, Target, Amazon, Costco, Home Depot, and other major retailers accept CSA certification alongside UL and ETL as meeting their supplier safety requirements. All three are OSHA-recognized NRTL marks and are treated equivalently by retail compliance departments.

## Sources

- [CSA Group - About Us](https://www.csagroup.org/about-csa-group/) — *CSA Group* (2025)
- [CSA Group Product Listing](https://www.csagroup.org/testing-certification/product-listing/) — *CSA Group* (2025)
- [OSHA Nationally Recognized Testing Laboratory (NRTL) Program](https://www.osha.gov/nationally-recognized-testing-laboratory-program) — *U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration* (2025)
- [OSHA Current List of NRTLs](https://www.osha.gov/nationally-recognized-testing-laboratory-program/current-list-of-nrtls) — *U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration* (2025)
- [Standards Council of Canada - Accredited Testing Organizations](https://www.scc.ca/en/accreditation/testing-laboratories) — *Standards Council of Canada* (2025)
- [CSA, UL and ETL: The Truth About Electrical Safety Labels in Canada](https://blog.primecables.ca/2026/01/csa-vs-ul-vs-etl-the-surprising-truth-about-electrical-safety-labels-in-canada/) — *PrimeCables Canada* (2026)
- [National Electrical Code (NEC) Article 110.3 - Examination, Identification, Installation, Use, and Listing](https://www.nfpa.org/codes-and-standards/nfpa-70-standard-for-electrical-safety-in-the-workplace) — *National Fire Protection Association* (2023)
- [CSA Group Testing and Certification Services](https://www.csagroup.org/testing-certification/) — *CSA Group* (2025)

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Source: https://www.r3recs.com/learn/certifications/csa-certified
Methodology: https://www.r3recs.com/methodology/how-we-score-products