CROSS-STANDARD public interest · Wireless / IoT device
China-to-Uzbekistan Wireless / IoT Device Compliance Gap Matrix (UZRTC / Gosstandart)
AI-compiled from official public sources — cross-checked by multiple AI models, not human-verified. Informational only; see disclaimer. Public-interest, source-linked comparison of common China wireless and IoT device documentation against Uzbekistan requirements under UZRTC (Uzbekistan Agency for Radio Frequencies and Television/Radio Broadcasting — O'zbekiston Respublikasi Radio Chastotalari va Teleko'rsatuv-Eshittirish Agentligi) and UzStandard / Gosstandart (Agency for Technical Regulation, Standardization and Metrology), covering UZRTC radio type approval and frequency permit, UzStandard Certificate of Conformity (Sertifikat Sootvetstviya) based on O'z DSt / GOST-aligned standards, electrical safety for the 220 V/50 Hz Type C/F grid, local importer requirements, and Uzbekistan cybersecurity obligations under Law No. ZRU-764 (2022). Uzbekistan is not an EAEU member — EAC marking does not apply and does not substitute for Uzbek conformity certification.
GAP MATRIX
Compliance Gap Matrix
| Compliance item | Common China baseline | Uzbekistan (UZRTC / Gosstandart) | Gap / action | Source + verification date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cybersecurity — Law No. ZRU-764 (2022) / UZCERT — No Mandatory IoT Device Certification Yet | In China, cybersecurity obligations for wireless and IoT devices arise under the Cybersecurity Law 2017, Data Security Law 2021, Personal Information Protection Law 2021, and MIIT IoT security guidelines. Specific product-level cybersecurity testing requirements apply to certain IoT categories (e.g., smart home devices) under GB/T standards and MIIT network access licensing. China's domestic cybersecurity framework is more developed and prescriptive than Uzbekistan's current regime.Cybersecurity Law of the People's Republic of China (2017) GB/T 35273 (Personal Information Security Specification) MIIT Network Access License (NAL) — incorporates cybersecurity review for telecom terminal equipment MIIT IoT Security Guidelines (2021) |
Uzbekistan enacted a Cybersecurity Law in 2022 establishing a national cybersecurity framework and formalising the role of the National Cybersecurity Center (UZCERT) under the Ministry of Digital Technologies. As of the access date, Uzbekistan has not introduced mandatory cybersecurity type-certification for consumer wireless or IoT devices equivalent to the EU Cyber Resilience Act or similar horizontal frameworks. Operators of critical information infrastructure (CII) face additional cybersecurity obligations. For consumer Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and general IoT devices, there is no product-level mandatory cybersecurity certification currently required at import or sale. However, exporters should monitor UZCERT guidance and any sector-specific regulations, particularly for devices used in smart metering, healthcare, or industrial IoT applications, where additional requirements may apply. Software and firmware supplied with imported devices must not contain functionality prohibited under Uzbekistan law.Law of the Republic of Uzbekistan No. ZRU-764 on Cybersecurity (2022) — establishes the national cybersecurity framework and UZCERT mandate UZCERT (National Cybersecurity Center under the Ministry of Digital Technologies) — operational guidelines and sector-specific cybersecurity requirements Uzbekistan Presidential Decree PD-60 (2021) — enabling cybersecurity framework predating Law No. ZRU-764 |
Currently low mandatory gap for consumer wireless devices — Uzbekistan has not yet enacted mandatory product-level cybersecurity certification for consumer IoT devices, so Chinese devices do not face a separate cybersecurity certification step at entry. However, the Cybersecurity Law 2022 is a live framework and sector-specific regulations for CII-adjacent or industrial IoT devices may introduce additional requirements. Monitor UZCERT guidance regularly. Devices must not include prohibited software functionality.[INFORMATIONAL] Uzbekistan's Cybersecurity Law 2022 establishes a national framework under UZCERT but does not yet impose mandatory product-level cybersecurity certification for consumer wireless or IoT devices at import or sale. No separate cybersecurity certification step is currently required for general consumer Wi-Fi and Bluetooth products. Exporters should monitor UZCERT guidance for emerging sector-specific requirements, particularly for industrial IoT, smart metering, or healthcare-adjacent devices, and ensure device firmware contains no prohibited functionality under Uzbekistan law. | National Cybersecurity Center of Uzbekistan (UZCERT)2026-06-17 · reference |
| Electrical Safety — UzStandard Certificate of Conformity for 220 V/50 Hz Type C/F Grid | Chinese wireless and IoT devices with power supplies must obtain CCC (China Compulsory Certification) for electrical safety, tested to applicable GB standards (GB 4943.1, which adopts IEC 60950-1, or GB/T 37965 / IEC 62368-1). China operates a 220 V / 50 Hz grid but uses Type A (flat 2-pin) and Type I (flat 3-pin, Australian-style) sockets, which are different from Uzbekistan's Type C/F. Chinese CCC electrical safety certificates are not recognised by UzStandard. A new UzStandard Certificate of Conformity must be obtained. Plug adapters are required for Chinese Type A or Type I-plugged products to fit Uzbekistan's Type C/F sockets.GB 4943.1 — Safety of information technology equipment (adopts IEC 60950-1), mandatory for CCC in China GB/T 37965 — Safety requirements for audio/video, information and communication technology equipment (aligned with IEC 62368-1) CCC — China Compulsory Certification — mandatory electrical safety certification for IT and consumer electronics sold in China China grid: 220 V / 50 Hz; Type A (flat 2-pin) and Type I (flat 3-pin) sockets |
Wireless devices with power supply units or mains connection sold in Uzbekistan must comply with electrical safety requirements under O'z DSt standards aligned with IEC 62368-1 (audio/video, information and communication technology equipment safety) or IEC 60950-1 as applicable, and obtain a UzStandard Certificate of Conformity (Sertifikat Sootvetstviya) covering electrical safety. Uzbekistan operates a 220–230 V / 50 Hz electrical grid using Type C (Europlug, 2-pin) and Type F (Schuko, 2-pin with earth) sockets. Power supplies designed for 110 V (North American standard) require voltage conversion and are not suitable for direct connection. Chinese 220 V power supplies with Type A or Type I plugs require physical plug adaptation for Type C/F sockets. The UzStandard electrical safety certificate is issued by an accredited Uzbek certification body following testing at an accredited laboratory. CCC electrical safety approval (GB 4943.1) is not recognised.O'z DSt standards series — Uzbek state standards for electrical safety of information and communications technology equipment, aligned with IEC 62368-1 and IEC 60950-1 IEC 62368-1 — Audio/video, information and communication technology equipment — Safety requirements (as adopted/referenced in O'z DSt) UzStandard / Gosstandart — Agency for Technical Regulation, Standardization and Metrology — issues Certificates of Conformity for electrical safety in Uzbekistan Uzbekistan grid standard — 220–230 V / 50 Hz; Type C (CEE 7/16) and Type F (CEE 7/4 Schuko) sockets |
Chinese CCC electrical safety certifications are not recognised by UzStandard; a separate UzStandard Certificate of Conformity is required. The underlying IEC 62368-1 standard is shared, but re-testing at a UzStandard-accredited laboratory is needed. Chinese products with Type A or Type I plugs require physical plug adaptation to Type C or Type F for the Uzbekistan market — a product modification to plan before finalising the Uzbek market version. Voltage compatibility (220 V) matches between China and Uzbekistan; however, all power-sensitive components must be verified for 50 Hz compatibility.[INFORMATIONAL] A UzStandard Certificate of Conformity for electrical safety is mandatory for mains-powered wireless devices sold in Uzbekistan. Chinese CCC electrical safety certificates are not accepted. Re-testing at a UzStandard-accredited laboratory is required. Plug adaptation from Chinese Type A/I to Type C/F (Uzbekistan standard) is required as a product modification. | UzStandard / Gosstandart — Agency for Technical Regulation, Standardization and Metrology of the Republic of Uzbekistan2026-06-17 · reference |
| EMC — UzStandard Certificate of Conformity (Sertifikat Sootvetstviya) for Electromagnetic Compatibility | Chinese wireless and IoT devices must comply with GB/T 9254 and related EMC standards enforced under the CCC (China Compulsory Certification) scheme administered by CNCA and tested by accredited laboratories. EMC for wireless devices is also covered under SRRC type approval. CCC and Chinese EMC test reports are not recognised by UzStandard and cannot substitute for a Uzbek Certificate of Conformity. Chinese test data generated to GB standards may be referenced in a UzStandard submission but full re-testing by a UzStandard-accredited laboratory is typically required to issue the Sertifikat Sootvetstviya.GB/T 9254 — Information technology equipment — Radio disturbance characteristics — Limits and methods of measurement (Chinese EMC standard) CCC — China Compulsory Certification scheme — mandatory EMC and safety certification for products sold in China SRRC Radio Type Approval — covers EMC aspects of radio transmission equipment under MIIT regulation |
Wireless and IoT devices sold in Uzbekistan must obtain a Certificate of Conformity (Sertifikat Sootvetstviya) from an accredited certification body recognised by UzStandard / Gosstandart (Agency for Technical Regulation, Standardization and Metrology of the Republic of Uzbekistan). For EMC, applicable standards are O'z DSt standards — many of which adopt or align closely with GOST-R and IEC CISPR standards — covering conducted and radiated emissions, immunity to electrical disturbance, and radio interference. Certification is compulsory and must be completed before the product is placed on the Uzbekistan market. Uzbekistan is not an EAEU member; the EAEU technical regulation TR CU 020/2011 (EMC) and EAC marking are not applicable. A separate Uzbek Certificate of Conformity is required.UzStandard / Gosstandart — Agency for Technical Regulation, Standardization and Metrology of the Republic of Uzbekistan — issues and oversees Certificates of Conformity O'z DSt standards series — Uzbek state standards for EMC, aligned with GOST-R and IEC CISPR series IEC CISPR 32 — Multimedia equipment — Electromagnetic disturbance characteristics (as adopted/referenced in O'z DSt) IEC CISPR 35 — Electromagnetic compatibility of multimedia equipment — Immunity requirements (as adopted/referenced in O'z DSt) |
Chinese CCC and SRRC EMC certifications are not recognised by UzStandard and do not substitute for a Uzbek Certificate of Conformity. A separate Sertifikat Sootvetstviya from a UzStandard-accredited body is mandatory before sale. The EAC mark under TR CU 020/2011 is also not valid in Uzbekistan as it is not an EAEU member. Exporters must budget time and cost for UzStandard certification, which typically takes 4–8 weeks and requires testing at an accredited Uzbek or mutually recognised laboratory.[INFORMATIONAL] A UzStandard Certificate of Conformity (Sertifikat Sootvetstviya) is mandatory for EMC compliance of wireless devices sold in Uzbekistan. Chinese CCC or SRRC certifications do not substitute. The EAC mark (TR CU 020/2011) is not valid — Uzbekistan is not in the EAEU. Re-testing at a UzStandard-accredited laboratory is typically required. | UzStandard / Gosstandart — Agency for Technical Regulation, Standardization and Metrology of the Republic of Uzbekistan2026-06-17 · reference |
| O'z DSt Conformity Certificate — Radio Equipment Immunity and Interference Standards | In China, immunity requirements for wireless and electronic products are covered under the CCC certification scheme, with applicable GB/T standards (including GB/T 17626 series, which adopts IEC 61000-4 immunity test methods) tested by CNCA-accredited laboratories. Chinese CCC certification addressing immunity is not recognised by UzStandard. The IEC 61000-4 test methods used in China align conceptually with those referenced in O'z DSt, but a fresh certification by a UzStandard-accredited body is required for Uzbekistan market access.GB/T 17626 series — Chinese standard series for electromagnetic immunity testing (adopts IEC 61000-4 test methods) CCC — China Compulsory Certification — covers immunity requirements for applicable product categories in China CNCA — Certification and Accreditation Administration of the People's Republic of China — administers CCC scheme |
In addition to the primary EMC Certificate of Conformity, radio and wireless devices in Uzbekistan must comply with applicable O'z DSt standards for radio frequency immunity and interference mitigation. These standards govern immunity to external electromagnetic fields, electrostatic discharge (ESD), fast transients, and surge immunity, and are applied through the UzStandard conformity certification process. O'z DSt standards in this area broadly align with IEC 61000 series (electromagnetic compatibility — immunity requirements) as adopted or adapted under Uzbek national standardization. Products must demonstrate compliance with all applicable immunity levels before the Sertifikat Sootvetstviya can be issued. For category-specific products (medical, industrial, residential environments), additional immunity levels may apply.O'z DSt series — Uzbek state standards for electromagnetic immunity, aligned with IEC 61000-4 series IEC 61000-4-2 — Electromagnetic compatibility — Testing and measurement techniques — Electrostatic discharge immunity test IEC 61000-4-4 — Electromagnetic compatibility — Testing and measurement techniques — Electrical fast transient/burst immunity test IEC 61000-4-5 — Electromagnetic compatibility — Testing and measurement techniques — Surge immunity test UzStandard / Gosstandart — certification authority for O'z DSt conformity in Uzbekistan |
Chinese CCC immunity certifications and GB/T 17626 test reports are not accepted by UzStandard for the purpose of issuing a Sertifikat Sootvetstviya. Although the underlying IEC 61000-4 test methods are shared, a fresh test campaign at a UzStandard-accredited laboratory is required. Exporters shipping into Uzbekistan's growing Chinese-device corridor (supported by Belt and Road infrastructure investment) should plan for immunity retesting as part of the overall Uzbek certification timeline.[INFORMATIONAL] O'z DSt immunity compliance is mandatory as part of the UzStandard Sertifikat Sootvetstviya for wireless devices sold in Uzbekistan. Chinese CCC immunity test reports are not accepted. Re-testing at a UzStandard-accredited laboratory is required. The EAC mark under TR CU 020/2011 does not apply — Uzbekistan is not in the EAEU. | UzStandard / Gosstandart — Agency for Technical Regulation, Standardization and Metrology of the Republic of Uzbekistan2026-06-17 · reference |
| EMC — Radiated and Conducted Emissions (O'z DSt / GOST-IEC Standards, UzStandard) | In China, EMC compliance for wireless and information technology equipment is governed by GB/T 9254 (Class A/B emissions, based on CISPR 22) and GB 17625.1 (harmonic current emissions, based on IEC 61000-3-2). These standards are referenced in the CCC certification process. Chinese GB-based EMC test reports are not directly transferable to Uzbekistan but can serve as a technical baseline for UzStandard testing.GB/T 9254 (CISPR 22 equivalent — Class A/B radiated and conducted emissions) GB 17625.1 (IEC 61000-3-2 equivalent — harmonic current emissions) GB 17625.2 (IEC 61000-3-3 equivalent — voltage fluctuations) |
Wireless and IoT devices sold in Uzbekistan must conform to EMC requirements specified under applicable O'z DSt standards published by UzStandard (Uzbekistan Agency for Technical Regulation). These standards are substantially derived from GOST standards (adopted from former Soviet / CIS technical norms) and are progressively aligned with IEC CISPR publications. Radiated and conducted emission limits apply to both intentional and unintentional radiators. Conformity is demonstrated through a UzStandard conformity certificate or declaration supported by accredited laboratory test reports. The UzACI type-approval process for radio equipment typically incorporates EMC testing.O'z DSt standards (GOST/IEC CISPR-derived EMC emission and immunity limits) UzStandard Conformity Assessment Regulations GOST R 51318.22 / GOST R 51318.24 (legacy reference basis, CISPR 22/24 equivalent) |
Partial technical overlap — both systems reference CISPR / IEC CISPR norms — but Chinese GB EMC certificates are not mutually recognised by UzStandard. Separate testing to applicable O'z DSt standards, at an accredited laboratory, is required to support the UzStandard conformity certificate. Some GB-based test data may reduce re-testing scope if the applicable O'z DSt limits are confirmed equivalent.[INFORMATIONAL] EMC conformity to applicable O'z DSt standards (GOST/IEC CISPR-derived) is required for wireless devices in Uzbekistan, evidenced by a UzStandard conformity certificate. Chinese GB/T 9254 and GB 17625 test reports are not accepted as a substitute but may reduce re-testing scope where limits align. Confirm current applicable O'z DSt standard numbers with UzStandard before testing. | Uzbekistan Agency for Technical Regulation (UzStandard)2026-06-17 · reference |
| EMC — Immunity Requirements (O'z DSt / IEC 61000 Series) | In China, EMC immunity is covered by GB/T 17618 (IEC 61000-4 series) and related GB/T standards. Immunity test reports are generated as part of CCC technical file preparation for relevant product categories. The scope of mandatory immunity testing in China depends on the specific product standard applicable to the device category.GB/T 17618 (IEC 61000-4 series equivalent — immunity test methods) GB 4943.1 (product safety standard referencing immunity context for ITE) |
In addition to emission limits, wireless and IoT devices sold in Uzbekistan may be subject to EMC immunity requirements under applicable O'z DSt standards, which reference GOST-IEC 61000 series equivalents covering electrostatic discharge (ESD), electrical fast transients (EFT), surges, and conducted/radiated immunity. Immunity testing requirements are particularly relevant for devices used in industrial or critical-environment applications. Consumer wireless products are typically tested for immunity as part of the UzACI type-approval process.O'z DSt (GOST-IEC 61000-4-2 equivalent — ESD immunity) O'z DSt (GOST-IEC 61000-4-4 equivalent — EFT/burst immunity) O'z DSt (GOST-IEC 61000-4-5 equivalent — surge immunity) |
Moderate gap. Both systems reference IEC 61000-4 series foundations but through different adopted standard numbers (O'z DSt vs. GB/T). Chinese immunity test reports are not recognised by UzStandard. Confirm with UzACI and UzStandard which O'z DSt immunity standards apply to the specific device category, then arrange accredited laboratory re-testing.[INFORMATIONAL] EMC immunity conformity to applicable O'z DSt standards (IEC 61000-4 series equivalent) is required for wireless and IoT devices in Uzbekistan. Chinese GB/T 17618 immunity test reports are not accepted as a substitute. Confirm the exact O'z DSt standards applicable to the product category with UzStandard before planning laboratory testing. | Uzbekistan Agency for Technical Regulation (UzStandard)2026-06-17 · reference |
| Local Authorised Importer / Agent — Uzbekistan Market Entry Requirement | For the Chinese domestic market, no local agent or importer designation is required from a Chinese manufacturer. CCC certificates and product labelling requirements are in Simplified Chinese (Mandarin). There is no equivalent 'foreign importer agent' obligation within China's domestic compliance framework. The concept is not applicable to Chinese export; it is a target-market (Uzbekistan) requirement.CCC labelling requirements (Simplified Chinese, Chinese standard product marks) No equivalent local-agent designation requirement in Chinese domestic framework |
Foreign manufacturers exporting wireless or IoT devices to Uzbekistan must designate a locally registered authorised importer or distributor who holds or co-holds the UzACI conformity certificate and UzStandard conformity documents. The importer bears legal responsibility for compliance, customs clearance, and post-market obligations. Product labels must include information in both Uzbek (O'zbek tili, Latin script) and Russian (as a co-official language widely used in commerce and technical documentation), covering product name, technical specifications, manufacturer name and address, voltage/frequency rating, and applicable conformity mark. Import of radio and telecom terminal equipment may additionally require an import permit or prior notification to the State Customs Committee of Uzbekistan or relevant authorities. EAC mark requirements do NOT apply — Uzbekistan is not a member of the Eurasian Economic Union.Uzbekistan Law on Telecommunications (2014, as amended) — importer obligations Uzbekistan Consumer Protection Law — labelling requirements State Customs Committee of Uzbekistan — import permit procedures for restricted goods Uzbekistan State Language Law — Uzbek as official language; Russian widely accepted in technical/commercial contexts |
Full gap — no Chinese domestic equivalent. A locally registered Uzbekistan importer or distributor must be designated and must co-hold the conformity certificates. Product labels must be redone in Uzbek (Latin script) and Russian; Chinese-only labels are not compliant. Verify current import permit requirements for radio equipment with the State Customs Committee of Uzbekistan.[INFORMATIONAL] A locally registered authorised importer in Uzbekistan is required to hold or co-hold UzACI and UzStandard conformity certificates and bears legal responsibility for imported wireless devices. Product labels must be in Uzbek (Latin script) and Russian. The Russian EAC mark is not required and carries no legal effect in Uzbekistan. Confirm current import permit obligations for radio equipment with the State Customs Committee and UzACI before shipment. | State Customs Committee of the Republic of Uzbekistan2026-06-17 · reference |
| Radio / Telecom Terminal Equipment Type Approval (UzACI Conformity Certificate) | In China, intentional radio transmitters require MIIT/SRRC radio type approval. Telecom terminal equipment requires a MIIT Network Access License (NAL). CCC certification covers electrical and RF safety for applicable product categories. These Chinese approvals are independent of and not mutually recognised with UzACI.MIIT Radio Transmitter Type Approval (SRRC) MIIT Network Access License (NAL) for telecom terminal equipment CCC (China Compulsory Certification) for applicable RF product categories |
All radio and telecom terminal equipment — including Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and cellular-enabled devices — must obtain a UzACI conformity certificate (type approval) from the Agency for Communications and Information (under the Ministry of Digital Technologies) before import or sale in Uzbekistan. Testing must be conducted by an accredited laboratory against applicable O'z DSt standards or accepted ITU/GOST-derived standards. The certificate covers radio spectrum use, interference parameters, and minimum technical performance. Neither the Russian EAC mark nor the Chinese SRRC approval substitutes for this requirement.Uzbekistan Law on Telecommunications (2014, as amended) UzACI Conformity Assessment Procedures for Radio and Telecom Terminal Equipment O'z DSt standards series (GOST/ITU-derived, telecommunications) |
Full gap. UzACI conformity certificate is mandatory and must be obtained separately. SRRC, CCC, and Russian EAC marks have no legal standing in Uzbekistan. A new conformity assessment against UzACI/O'z DSt requirements — including local or mutually accepted laboratory testing — is required for each product model.[INFORMATIONAL] UzACI conformity certificate is a mandatory prerequisite for import and sale of all radio and telecom terminal equipment in Uzbekistan. Chinese SRRC, CCC, and Russian EAC approvals are not accepted. A separate UzACI conformity assessment — including laboratory testing to O'z DSt or accepted GOST/ITU standards — must be completed before market entry. | Ministry of Digital Technologies of the Republic of Uzbekistan (UzACI)2026-06-17 · reference |
| UZRTC Radio Type Approval and Frequency Permit — Uzbekistan Telecom and Radio Equipment | Chinese wireless devices are subject to SRRC (State Radio Regulatory Commission of China) radio type approval for radio transmission modules and equipment, administered under MIIT. Devices using Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and other radio frequencies must obtain an SRRC approval number before sale in China. Terminal equipment (routers, modems, cellular devices) additionally requires a MIIT Network Access License (NAL). Chinese SRRC approval and NAL are not recognised by UZRTC and do not substitute for Uzbekistan type approval. Test data generated to Chinese standards (GB 15629.11 for Wi-Fi, YD/T series for cellular) are not accepted by UZRTC; full re-evaluation by an UZRTC-accredited laboratory is required.SRRC Radio Type Approval — State Radio Regulatory Commission of China (MIIT), mandatory for radio transmission equipment sold in China MIIT Network Access License (NAL) — Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, mandatory for telecom terminal equipment sold in China GB 15629.11 — Information technology — Telecommunications and information exchange between systems — WLAN (Wi-Fi) YD/T series — Chinese telecom industry standards for cellular terminal equipment |
All radio and telecommunications terminal equipment placed on the Uzbekistan market must obtain type approval and a frequency permit from UZRTC (Uzbekistan Agency for Radio Frequencies and Television/Radio Broadcasting — O'zbekiston Respublikasi Radio Chastotalari va Teleko'rsatuv-Eshittirish Agentligi). UZRTC manages radio spectrum allocation and issues frequency assignment permits required before radio equipment may be imported or operated. Wi-Fi at 2.4 GHz is generally permitted for licence-exempt use; 5 GHz Wi-Fi requires a UZRTC frequency permit. Bluetooth, Zigbee, Z-Wave, cellular (3G/4G/5G), and all other radio-frequency devices are within scope. Type approval requires submission of technical documentation and test reports from accredited laboratories. An approval certificate or registration number is issued by UZRTC and must be in place before import and commercial sale. Uzbekistan is not a member of the EAEU — Russian EAC marking is not applicable and does not substitute for UZRTC approval.Law of the Republic of Uzbekistan 'On Telecommunications' — establishes mandatory type approval for telecom terminal and radio equipment Law of the Republic of Uzbekistan 'On Radio Frequency Spectrum' — governs spectrum allocation and frequency permit requirements UZRTC (O'zbekiston Respublikasi Radio Chastotalari va Teleko'rsatuv-Eshittirish Agentligi) — regulatory authority for radio frequency type approval and frequency permits in Uzbekistan O'z DSt standards series — Uzbek state standards for radio and telecommunications equipment |
Chinese SRRC approval and MIIT NAL are not recognised by UZRTC and cannot be used as substitutes for Uzbekistan radio type approval. A separate UZRTC type approval application must be filed, supported by test reports from an UZRTC-accredited laboratory. 5 GHz Wi-Fi requires an additional UZRTC frequency permit even after type approval. Products imported or sold in Uzbekistan without valid UZRTC type approval and frequency permit are subject to confiscation, market withdrawal, and administrative penalties. The strong Belt and Road trade corridor between China and Uzbekistan increases customs scrutiny for non-compliant radio devices. Timeline for UZRTC type approval varies but typically takes 2–4 months.[INFORMATIONAL] UZRTC radio type approval and frequency permit are mandatory for all Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, cellular, and IoT radio devices sold in Uzbekistan. Chinese SRRC approval does not substitute. A dedicated UZRTC application with accredited test reports is required. 5 GHz Wi-Fi needs a separate frequency permit. Uzbekistan is not in the EAEU — the EAC mark does not apply. | UZRTC — Uzbekistan Agency for Radio Frequencies and Television/Radio Broadcasting2026-06-17 · reference |
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SOURCES
Official-source register.
- National Cybersecurity Center of Uzbekistan (UZCERT) · accessed 2026-06-17 · reference · used in 1 rows
- UzStandard / Gosstandart — Agency for Technical Regulation, Standardization and Metrology of the Republic of Uzbekistan · accessed 2026-06-17 · reference · used in 3 rows
- Uzbekistan Agency for Technical Regulation (UzStandard) · accessed 2026-06-17 · reference · used in 2 rows
- State Customs Committee of the Republic of Uzbekistan · accessed 2026-06-17 · reference · used in 1 rows
- Ministry of Digital Technologies of the Republic of Uzbekistan (UzACI) · accessed 2026-06-17 · reference · used in 1 rows
- UZRTC — Uzbekistan Agency for Radio Frequencies and Television/Radio Broadcasting · accessed 2026-06-17 · reference · used in 1 rows