CPSC Triggers Major Amazon Recall After Shocking Child Safety Fears

The CPSC has issued a sweeping recall of Amazon products linked to child injury and death hazards. From dressers to baby loungers, the dangers are more common than you think.

Published on
Read : 2 min
CPSC Triggers Major Amazon Recall
© Shutterstock

A baby lounger, children’s toy, and two models of dressers sold on Amazon have been recalled across the United States due to risks of injury or death to children. The US Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) has warned that these items fail to meet mandatory safety standards and pose significant dangers if used in households with young children.

A total of four different products are affected by the recall, including dressers that can easily tip over, a toy with high-powered magnets, and infant loungers with unsafe design features. While no injuries have yet been reported, authorities are urging consumers to immediately stop using the products and request refunds from the respective companies.

Recalled Products Linked to Tipping, Entrapment and Magnetic Hazards

According to the CPSC, the affected items include the Rattan 6-Drawer Dresser (model YD001), the Vasicar 18-Drawer Dresser (models VR-US18D-Black, White, Gray, and Mixed), the Lterfear Multifunction Pounding Game (model D888), and Joyful Journeys Baby Loungers. These products were available for purchase online through Amazon between December 2023 and November 2025.

The two dresser models were recalled for failing to comply with the STURDY Act, federal legislation requiring clothing storage units to meet specific stability standards. The CPSC states the dressers are “unstable if they are not anchored to a wall,” creating a “serious tip-over and entrapment hazard” that could result in injuries or death to children. Around 870 units of the Rattan 6-Drawer Dresser and over 4,100 units of the Vasicar 18-Drawer Dresser have been sold.

The Lterfear Multifunction Pounding Game, sold between June and September 2025 for between $24 and $28, includes several detachable pieces and magnets. The CPSC says the toy contains “high-powered magnets that can separate and be ingested.” It warned that if swallowed, the magnets “can attract each other, or other metal objects, and become lodged in the digestive system.” Such incidents can lead to “perforations, twisting and/or blockage of the intestines, blood poisoning, and death,” according to the agency.

Infant Loungers Fail to Meet Sleep Safety Regulations

The Joyful Journeys Baby Loungers were also pulled from the market for violating federal safety standards for infant sleep products. The loungers, sold between December 2023 and October 2025 for $40 to $60, feature foam sleeping pads and padded bumpers. They were available in various styles, including green avocado, pink zoo animals, blue dinosaurs, and neutral elephants.

According to the CPSC, the loungers’ design includes sides that are too low and ends that are too wide to keep infants properly secured. The absence of a stand also means they can pose a fall hazard if placed on elevated surfaces. These design flaws create “an unsafe sleeping environment and can cause death or serious injury to infants,” the commission warned.

Despite the scale of the recall (over 17,000 units across all four products) the CPSC confirmed that, as of 8 January, there have been no injuries or fatalities reported in relation to these items. The recalls remain active, and consumers are strongly advised to stop using the products and contact the sellers (Fuzhou Sunrise Creation Corporation Co., Ltd, Vasicar, Findriver and Weeksome, and Joyful Journeys) for full refund procedures.

As part of its ongoing commitment to child safety, the CPSC emphasised that “federal law prohibits the sale of products subject to commission-ordered recalls.” The acting chairman, Peter Feldman, said the agency had “made great strides” in reducing household hazards over the past decade, and stressed the importance of continued collaboration with manufacturers to ensure compliance.

Leave a Comment

Share to...