- ConsumersIncreases consumer transparency by requiring prominent disclosure of reduced product quantities, which supporters say w…
- ConsumersReduces a form of hidden price inflation (shrinkflation) by making quantity reductions more visible, potentially preser…
- Federal agenciesCreates a single federal standard enforced by the FTC, which supporters may argue reduces uneven state regulation and p…
Deceptive Downsizing Prohibition Act of 2025
Referred to the House Committee on Energy and Commerce.
This bill (Deceptive Downsizing Prohibition Act of 2025) directs the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) to prohibit manufacturers from selling a reduced‑size consumer product in the same or substantially similar packaging that was used for a prior, larger version of the product.
It defines “deceptive downsizing,” “reduced size,” and related terms, and creates a safe harbor where a manufacturer can avoid liability if it places a conspicuous notice on the principal display panel stating both the larger size and the reduced size.
The FTC is authorized to promulgate regulations under the Administrative Procedure Act to implement the law and to enforce violations as unfair or deceptive acts or practices under the FTC Act.
On content alone, the bill is a modest, administratively focused consumer‑protection measure with no new federal spending and a clear safe harbor, which improves its prospects. However, it touches many manufacturers and packaging supply chains that may mobilize substantial opposition, and the requirement for Senate consensus and potential legal challenges to FTC rulemaking reduce the near‑term chance it becomes law without compromise or amendment.
Relative to its intended legislative type, this bill clearly defines a consumer-protection problem and establishes a statutory prohibition with definitions, a safe harbor, and delegation to the FTC for rulemaking and enforcement, but it omits implementation timelines, resource acknowledgements, detailed definitional tests for key terms, and explicit handling of many foreseeable edge cases.
Degree of support for new federal regulation: liberals generally welcome stronger consumer protections; conservatives worry about regulatory overreach.
Who stands to gain, and who may push back.
- ManufacturersImposes compliance costs on manufacturers and retailers (label redesign, printing, inventory separation, regulatory/leg…
- ConsumersMay lead manufacturers to pass compliance and production costs to consumers through higher prices, or to discontinue ma…
- Federal agenciesCreates administrative and enforcement workload for the FTC (rulemaking, guidance, investigations, and potential litiga…
Why the argument around this bill splits.
Degree of support for new federal regulation: liberals generally welcome stronger consumer protections; conservatives worry about regulatory overreach.
A typical liberal/left‑leaning commentator would view this bill favorably as a straightforward consumer protection measure that addresses so‑called "shrinkflation." They would see it as the federal government using its consumer‑protection authority to increase transparency and protect purchasing power, especially for lower‑income households.
They may wish the bill went further (for example, stronger default labeling requirements, unit‑pricing standards, or expedited enforcement), but would consider it a useful, pro‑consumer step.
Any reservations would center on whether the FTC will write robust, easy‑to‑use rules and enforce them vigorously.
A centrist/moderate would likely regard the bill as a reasonable, targeted consumer‑protection measure that can be implemented administratively by the FTC.
They would appreciate the safe harbor and delegation to the agency for technical rulemaking, but worry about drafting clarity (e.g., what counts as 'substantially similar packaging' or 'conspicuous').
Centrists would weigh benefits to consumers against compliance costs for businesses and would look for narrow, evidence‑based regulation and transitional provisions for small firms.
A mainstream conservative would likely be skeptical of this bill as unnecessary regulation that expands FTC authority and imposes compliance costs on manufacturers.
They would argue that market remedies (consumer choice, competition, unit pricing) are preferable and question whether federal rules are the right mechanism.
Some conservatives might accept the stated goal of preventing deliberate deception, but they would press for narrow definitions, minimal regulatory burdens, and protections against overbroad enforcement or litigation.
The path through Congress.
Reached or meaningfully advanced
Reached or meaningfully advanced
Still ahead
Still ahead
Still ahead
On content alone, the bill is a modest, administratively focused consumer‑protection measure with no new federal spending and a clear safe harbor, which improves its prospects. However, it touches many manufacturers and packaging supply chains that may mobilize substantial opposition, and the requirement for Senate consensus and potential legal challenges to FTC rulemaking reduce the near‑term chance it becomes law without compromise or amendment.
- No cost estimate or regulatory impact analysis is included; the scale of compliance costs for industry and any resulting economic effects are unknown.
- How the FTC would define "substantially similar packaging," "principal display panel," and other terms in regulation is unclear and could materially affect enforcement scope and litigation risk.
Recent votes on the bill.
No vote history yet
The bill has not accumulated any surfaced votes yet.
Go deeper than the headline read.
Degree of support for new federal regulation: liberals generally welcome stronger consumer protections; conservatives worry about regulator…
On content alone, the bill is a modest, administratively focused consumer‑protection measure with no new federal spending and a clear safe…
Relative to its intended legislative type, this bill clearly defines a consumer-protection problem and establishes a statutory prohibition with definitions, a safe harbor, and delegation to the FTC for rulemaking and en…
Go beyond the headline summary with full stakeholder mapping, legislative design analysis, passage barriers, and lens-by-lens tradeoff breakdowns.