Infant Swings (COMEONROA) – Suffocation Hazard (2025)
Check Your Product
According to the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC)
Product
COMEONROA Infant Swings
Lot Codes / Batch Numbers
Not specified in CPSC notice. Check official source for details.
Product Images
Source: U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission
A manufacturer is recalling COMEONROA Infant Swings. The hazard is: The swings pose a suffocation risk because they were marketed for infant sleep, and they have an inc. Based on CPSC recall notice.
Summary derived from CPSC notice
The following details were not provided by CPSC: UPC codes.
Reason for Recall
As stated by CPSC
This recall involves COMEONROA-branded electric infant swings. They were sold in a blue space-themed pattern and have a black base with a touch-screen panel, a star and a moon hanging plush toys, a pillow, a seat cover and a mosquito net with canopy. They measure about 25.5 inches in length, 25.5 inches in width and 20.8 inches in height and come with a remote control and a USB cable. "Model No.: S-Y608" and "Baby cradle swing" are printed on a label located under the seat.
Reported concern (CPSC)
The swings pose a suffocation risk because they were marketed for infant sleep, and they have an incline angle greater than 10 degrees, in violation of the Safe Sleep for Babies Act. In addition, the swings fail to meet mandatory warning requirements under the swing standard and are missing the required warnings and instructions for consumer products containing button cell and coin batteries under Reese's Law.
Recommended Action
Per CPSC guidance
Consumers should stop using the recalled infant swings immediately and contact Eonroacoo for a full refund. Consumers should send a photo of the swing cover cut in half, and of the swing with "Recalled" written with permanent marker on its base, to eonroacoorecall@126.com and then dispose the swing in accordance with local and state laws. Eonroacoo and Walmart are contacting all known purchasers directly. Note: Button cell batteries are hazardous. Batteries should be disposed of or recycled by following local hazardous waste procedures.
Verify this information on the official source
This page aggregates publicly available data. Always confirm recall details directly with the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) before taking action.
View official CPSC recall noticePage updated: Jan 10, 2026
Important Notice
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