Product Recall Manufacturers
Which companies have issued the most consumer product safety recalls? Rankings based on 9,905 CPSC recall records.
The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) tracks which manufacturers are responsible for recalled products. A high recall count does not necessarily indicate a dangerous company — larger manufacturers produce more products and are therefore statistically more likely to appear in recall data. However, this data is useful for identifying patterns and understanding which industries and brands have the most safety incidents on record.
All Manufacturers
2,278 manufacturers found in CPSC recall records. Sorted by recall count.
| # | Manufacturer | Recalls | Most Recent | View |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1801 | MBR Industries Inc. of Miami | 1 | Mar 30, 1997 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1802 | BISSELL Homecare Inc. | 1 | Feb 10, 2005 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1803 | Trane and American Standard | 1 | Feb 10, 2005 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1804 | Giftco | 1 | Feb 9, 2005 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1805 | Superlines International | 1 | Feb 8, 2005 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1806 | Horn Sing Ind. Company Ltd. | 1 | Feb 7, 2005 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1807 | Dubbster (H & M private label) | 1 | Feb 3, 2005 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1808 | Creative Technologies | 1 | Nov 13, 1995 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1809 | Philips PC Peripherals | 1 | Jan 13, 2005 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1810 | Selle Royal/fi'zi:k | 1 | Jan 13, 2005 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1811 | Comtrad | 1 | Jan 12, 2005 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1812 | Ascom Systec AG | 1 | Jan 12, 2005 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1813 | Emerson Tool Co. | 1 | Jan 12, 2005 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1814 | Poundex Associates Corp. | 1 | Jan 12, 2005 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1815 | The Brinkmann Corporation of Dallas | 1 | Nov 28, 1995 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1816 | Georgia Boot | 1 | Jul 13, 2004 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1817 | Orbelle Trade Inc. | 1 | Jan 5, 2005 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1818 | Royal Appliance | 1 | Jan 3, 2005 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1819 | The Step 2 Co. | 1 | Jan 3, 2005 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1820 | GE Security Inc. | 1 | Dec 21, 2004 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1821 | Umarex | 1 | Dec 21, 2004 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1822 | Raymond Geddes Co. Inc. | 1 | Dec 16, 2004 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1823 | Cosco Inc. of Columbus | 1 | Dec 5, 1995 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1824 | NETGEAR Inc. | 1 | Jul 13, 2004 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1825 | SCUBAPRO of El Cajon | 1 | Dec 8, 2004 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1826 | Norton McNaughton of Squire | 1 | Dec 8, 2004 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1827 | Technical Consumer Products Inc. | 1 | Dec 7, 2004 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1828 | Exmark Manufacturing | 1 | Dec 5, 2004 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1829 | Robert Bosch Tool Corporation | 1 | Dec 5, 2004 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1830 | Snow Peak USA | 1 | Jul 14, 2004 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1831 | Lakewood Engineering & Manufacturing Company of Chicago | 1 | Nov 22, 2004 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1832 | Midwest Electric Products | 1 | Nov 18, 2004 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1833 | Emerson Motor Co. | 1 | Nov 18, 2004 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1834 | The Byer Manufacturing Company | 1 | Nov 18, 2004 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1835 | The Nautilus Group | 1 | Nov 15, 2004 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1836 | The Unitary Products Group (UPG) of York International Corp. | 1 | Nov 14, 2004 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1837 | Zhongshan KDB Health Solutions Co. | 1 | Apr 2, 2026 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1838 | Black Diamond Equipment Ltd. | 1 | Nov 8, 2004 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1839 | Answer Products | 1 | Nov 7, 2004 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1840 | Cordelia Lighting | 1 | Nov 3, 2004 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1841 | The Valvoline Company | 1 | Nov 3, 2004 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1842 | Schneider Electric North American Division | 1 | Nov 3, 2004 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1843 | adidas America Inc. | 1 | Nov 2, 2004 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1844 | Just Toys Inc. of New York | 1 | Dec 19, 1995 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1845 | Zhejiang Anlu Cleaning Machinery Co. Ltd. | 1 | Jul 14, 2004 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1846 | Hecmma Group | 1 | Oct 27, 2004 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1847 | Chris Arlotta Enterprises Ltd. | 1 | Oct 19, 2004 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1848 | Zippo Manufacturing Company | 1 | Oct 19, 2004 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1849 | Avanti Products Inc. | 1 | Oct 18, 2004 | View Recalls · Brand History |
| 1850 | Sky High International LLC | 1 | Oct 14, 2004 | View Recalls · Brand History |
Manufacturer names are extracted from CPSC recall records and may include subsidiaries and brand names filed under a parent company.
Understanding Manufacturer Recall Data
Why Do Companies Recall Products?
Product recalls happen when a manufacturer or the CPSC determines that a product poses an unreasonable risk of injury to consumers. Recalls can be initiated voluntarily by a manufacturer — often when internal quality control finds a problem — or mandated by CPSC after consumer complaints, injuries, or safety investigations. Either way, the manufacturer is legally required to notify consumers and provide a remedy at no cost.
Does a High Recall Count Mean a Company is Unsafe?
Not necessarily. Companies that manufacture high volumes across many product categories will statistically have more recalls than smaller, specialized manufacturers. What matters more is the nature of the hazards involved, the response time after identifying a problem, and whether the company proactively reported the issue to CPSC or waited to be forced. Voluntary recalls are generally viewed more favorably than CPSC-mandated ones.
Frequently Asked Questions
Under the Consumer Product Safety Act, manufacturers must immediately report to CPSC when they discover their product contains a defect that could create a substantial product hazard. Once a recall is agreed upon, manufacturers must notify retailers to stop selling the product, alert consumers through direct notice and media, and offer a remedy — typically a refund, replacement, or free repair. Failure to report known defects can result in civil penalties of up to $100,000 per violation and up to $15 million for related violations.
Yes. If a consumer is injured by a defective product — whether or not it has been recalled — the manufacturer may be held liable under product liability law. Recalls often become evidence in personal injury lawsuits because they establish that the manufacturer knew or should have known about the defect. If you were injured by a recalled product, you may have grounds for a legal claim regardless of whether you received the recall notice or participated in the remedy program.
Children's products — including toys, cribs, strollers, and car seats — consistently make up a significant portion of CPSC recalls due to strict safety standards and the vulnerability of the user population. Electrical and electronic products (space heaters, power banks, extension cords) are frequently recalled for fire and shock hazards. Furniture recalls have grown significantly in recent years, primarily due to tip-over incidents involving dressers and bookcases. Outdoor power equipment is another high-recall category due to blade and mechanical hazards.
CPSC does not set a universal expiration date on recalls — in theory, a recall remains in effect indefinitely. However, manufacturers may apply to CPSC to close out a recall if participation rates are high enough or the product is no longer a risk. In practice, most manufacturers maintain active recall remedy programs for at least 10 years. If you have an old product and are unsure whether a recall is still active, you can search by recall number on the CPSC website or contact the manufacturer directly.
A voluntary recall is initiated by the manufacturer, usually after discovering a defect through internal testing, consumer complaints, or injury reports. The manufacturer works cooperatively with CPSC to announce and execute the recall. A mandatory recall is ordered by CPSC after the agency determines that a product presents a substantial hazard and the manufacturer has refused to act voluntarily. Mandatory recalls are relatively rare — the vast majority of CPSC recalls are voluntary — but when they do occur, they often involve situations where the manufacturer initially disputed the safety risk.
Search Product Recalls
Look up recalls for a specific manufacturer, product, or hazard type using our full recall database.