If you have ever looked at the back of a switch socket and seen a jumble of marks — CE, RoHS, SASO, UL — you might wonder what actually matters and what is just marketing stickers. The short answer: most of them are legally mandatory depending on where you sell the product.
Here is a plain explanation of the certifications that apply to wall switches and sockets, and why they matter for anyone sourcing these products internationally.
CE Marking — Europe
The CE mark says the product meets EU safety, health, and environmental requirements. For switches, this means compliance with the Low Voltage Directive 2014/35/EU and harmonised standards like EN 60669-1 (switches) and EN 60884-1 (plugs and sockets). It is not optional — products without CE marking cannot be sold in the European Economic Area.
SASO and GSO — Saudi Arabia and the Gulf
Saudi Arabia requires SASO certification for electrical products, based on SASO 2203/2018 (which is itself based on BS 1363). The GCC countries — UAE, Qatar, Kuwait, Oman, Bahrain — follow similar GSO standards. If your target market is the Middle East, these are non-negotiable. MORDIO’s SASO and GSO certifications cover all our Middle East-bound products.
UL Listing — USA
UL (Underwriters Laboratories) is technically voluntary in the US, but many retailers and building codes require it. UL 498 covers sockets (receptacles), UL 20 covers switches. In Canada, the equivalent is CSA certification. Without UL or ETL listing, getting products onto US distributors’ shelves is an uphill battle.
RoHS — Restricted Substances
RoHS restricts lead, mercury, cadmium, and certain flame retardants in electrical products. It is mandatory in the EU (Directive 2011/65/EU) and increasingly referenced elsewhere. A RoHS-compliant switch uses lead-free solder and cadmium-free contacts. This is one you can typically trust — most reputable factories comply as standard.
ISO 9001 — Quality Management
This is not a product certificate — it certifies the factory’s quality management system. ISO 9001 means the factory has documented processes for QC, traceability, and continuous improvement. It is worth checking because it tells you whether the factory operates systematically or just winging it.
Which Ones Do You Actually Need?
- Europa: CE + RoHS (minimum). CB scheme helps if you sell into multiple EU countries.
- UK: UKCA (post-Brexit). CE may still be accepted in some cases.
- Saudi Arabia / GCC: SASO / GSO + IEC test report.
- USA / Canada: UL or ETL + CSA for Canada.
- Multiple markets: CB scheme — one test report accepted in ~60 countries.
Certified products cost a bit more to manufacture because the testing and compliance work is real. But if you are serious about building a brand, skipping certification is false economy — customs seizures, liability issues, and lost trust cost far more than the certification process.
All MORDIO products in our Britisch, Europäisch, und Amerikanischer Standard ranges carry the relevant certifications for their markets. If you are sourcing OEM and need specific certs, just ask — we can usually accommodate.