Your membership has expired

The payment for your account couldn't be processed or you've canceled your account with us.

Re-activate

Save products you love, products you own and much more!

Save products icon

Other Membership Benefits:

Savings icon Exclusive Deals for Members Best time to buy icon Best Time to Buy Products Recall tracker icon Recall & Safety Alerts TV screen optimizer icon TV Screen Optimizer and more

    The STURDY Act to Prevent Deadly Furniture Tip-Overs Passed by Congress

    The new law will help stop injuries and deaths from the common accidents

    Baby looking up at dresser drawers Photo: Getty Images

    Update: The Consumer Product Safety Commission on April 19, 2023 voted to adopt a standard for dressers and other storage furniture that will help prevent furniture tip-overs by requiring strong and practical stability tests. The standard—which was developed by ASTM International, an independent standard-setting organization—is expected to go into effect sometime this summer and will be a mandatory rule.

    Original: The aptly named Stop Tip-overs of Unstable, Risky Dressers on Youth (STURDY) Act, which seeks to prevent child deaths from falling furniture, has been passed by Congress. The new legislation will require the Consumer Product Safety Commission to set mandatory safety standards for all dressers and similar products made or sold in the U.S.

    Tucked into the middle of the 4,000-page, $1.7 trillion spending bill passed just before Friday’s deadline in order to avert a government shutdown, the STURDY Act comes after years of investigative reporting by Consumer Reports and advocacy from parents’ groups.

    More on Furniture Tip-Overs

    Hundreds of young children have died and thousands have been injured from falling furniture or televisions in the past two decades. A majority of tip-over deaths involve children under the age of 6. But previously, there was only a voluntary safety standard in place for furniture sold in the U.S. Consumer safety advocates have criticized the standard, established by a committee of the standards development organization ASTM International, for being too weak, as well as voluntary. 

    The STURDY Act, which was sponsored by Sen. Bob Casey, D-Pa., and Rep. Jan Schakowsky D-Ill., will require the CPSC to establish a mandatory rule for dresser sturdiness, strengthen testing requirements, and mandate strong warning labels. Dressers will now have to be tested in conditions that more accurately reflect real-world use—for instance, resting on carpets, containing the weight of clothes, and with drawers open.

    “Since 2000, more than 470 children have tragically died from furniture tip-overs,” Schakowsky says. “With the passage of the STURDY Act, a bill I introduced and have fought so hard for, we will now implement mandatory furniture stabilization standards. This would not have been possible without all the support we have received from advocates, survivors, and victims’ families who have bravely shared their stories.”

    Brett Horn’s 2-year-old son Charlie was killed in 2007 when a dresser fell onto him, and Horn has been fighting for stricter safety standards ever since. He’s now the chair of the advocacy group Parents Against Tip-Overs (PAT), which has pushed for this bill’s passage. 

    “We are thrilled that STURDY is finally going to become law; it’s a long-overdue solution to an easily fixable problem that industry has known the answer to for many, many years,” Horn says.

    Horn’s colleague at PAT, Kimberly Amato, says she feels relieved more than anything else. 

    “This is a strong and effective standard, and it’s stronger than anything else we’ve ever had in the past, and it’s going to save lives,” Amato says, speaking with CR on the 18-year anniversary of the day she buried her 3-year-old daughter Meghan.

    The American Home Furnishings Alliance applauded the passage of the STURDY Act, saying that it “will provide manufacturers with a clear pathway to compliance.” The AHFA is an industry trade group that represents hundreds of manufacturers and importers of furniture in the U.S. “The amended version of STURDY was the result of an extraordinary collaborative effort between industry, parent groups, and consumer advocates to address real-world conditions that contribute to furniture tip-overs,” says Bill Perdue, the group’s vice president of regulatory affairs.

    CR’s safety advocates also highlighted how the bill’s passage was a group effort.

    “This hard-fought victory would not have been possible without the courageous parent advocates who shared their stories, transformed their grief into action, and successfully urged Congress to ensure that no other family would have to suffer the preventable loss of a child,” says Gabe Knight, policy advocate at CR.


    Lauren Kirchner

    Lauren Kirchner is an investigative reporter on the special projects team at Consumer Reports. She has been with CR since 2022, covering product safety. She has previously reported on algorithmic bias, criminal justice, and housing for the Markup and ProPublica, and was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in Explanatory Reporting in 2017. Send her tips at lauren.kirchner@consumer.org and follow her on X: @lkirchner.