Dangerous Amazon Baby Products Recalled

Two Amazon baby products meant to cradle our youngest children just failed basic federal safety rules, exposing how globalist, third-party sellers keep putting profit over American families. The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission has warned that the Sofoliana and Glotika baby lounger set and the YCXXKJ baby bath seat, both sold by third-party marketplace sellers, pose a risk of serious injury or death to infants. Both items violated mandatory federal safety standards for baby sleep and bath products, spotlighting the ongoing risks from lightly vetted third-party sellers flooding U.S. marketplaces. Parents are now urged to stop using the items immediately and seek refunds.

Story Highlights

  • Two infant products sold on Amazon were recalled after regulators said they could cause serious injury or death.
  • Both items violated mandatory federal safety standards for baby sleep and bath products.
  • The recalls spotlight ongoing risks from lightly vetted third‑party sellers flooding U.S. marketplaces.
  • Parents are told to destroy products or stop using them immediately and seek refunds.

Dangerous Baby Products Slipped Onto Amazon Under Federal Radar

Two baby products sold on Amazon, a Sofoliana and Glotika baby lounger set and the YCXXKJ baby bath seat, have been pulled from the market after federal regulators warned they pose a risk of serious injury or death to infants. The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission found both products violated mandatory safety standards that exist precisely because past design failures have killed children. Parents are now being urged to stop using the items immediately and pursue recall remedies.

The baby loungers, sold by a third‑party seller called Bosen US, were marketed as a cozy place for infants to rest but failed basic design requirements for infant sleep products. The sides are too low to safely contain a baby, and openings at the foot are wider than allowed, which regulators say can lead to entrapment or falls. Without a proper stand, placing the lounger on any elevated surface adds yet another fall hazard for vulnerable infants.

Recalled Loungers and Bath Seats Expose Design Failures

Roughly 200 Sofoliana and Glotika loungers are covered by the recall, a relatively small batch that still represents hundreds of families who trusted an online listing to be safe. The CPSC warned that the loungers create an unsafe sleeping environment and could cause death or serious injury. To receive a refund, parents are instructed to remove the foam and pad, cut them and the cover in half, and email photos to the seller as proof of destruction before their money is returned.

The YCXXKJ baby bath seats, sold by another Amazon marketplace seller called BenTalk, present a different but equally serious danger. Nearly 9,000 of these seats were recalled because they fail the mandatory stability standards for infant bath seats. Regulators say the seats can tip over during normal use, creating a drowning risk if a child slips under the water. Parents are told to stop using the product and contact BenTalk directly by phone or email to arrange a remedy.

Federal Standards Exist Because Past Products Cost Children Their Lives

These recalls are part of a longer story that many busy parents never see. After multiple tragedies involving inclined sleepers, soft loungers, and unstable bath seats over past decades, the federal government put strict rules in place for infant sleep products and bath seats. Those standards govern how high the sides must be, how wide openings can be, and how stable a product must remain when a baby moves, all to prevent suffocation, entrapment, falls, and drowning before they happen.

The CPSC has been clear that these rules are not suggestions; they are mandatory requirements that manufacturers and importers must meet before putting anything in front of American families. Federal law also bars anyone from selling recalled products, online or offline. Yet despite those protections, unsafe items like these loungers and bath seats still reached homes through the enormous pipeline of third‑party sellers using Amazon’s marketplace to access U.S. consumers with limited pre‑market scrutiny.

Online Marketplaces and Third‑Party Sellers Under Fresh Scrutiny

Both recalled products share a common thread: they come from smaller, lesser‑known brands using Amazon as their primary gateway into American households. These sellers, Bosen US and BenTalk, are now responsible for issuing refunds and coordinating with regulators, but the damage to trust is already done. Millions of conservative families rely on online shopping for convenience, yet they reasonably expect that anything marketed for a baby has cleared basic safety hurdles before showing up on their doorstep.

For years, conservatives have warned about reckless global supply chains, weak oversight, and the outsourcing of responsibility to distant corporations. These recalls reinforce that concern. When unsafe imported products slip through and regulators only catch them after testing or complaints, parents are left to play defense in their own homes. That is why a renewed focus on accountability, transparent standards, and real enforcement is essential if we want American families—not foreign vendors or unvetted brands—to set the terms of safety.

Watch the report: Baby play yards sold on Amazon recalled due to risk of serious injury

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