Joolz Aer2 car seat adapter recall | CPSC baby gear recall list June 2026 | how to check if baby gear is recalled

The Baby Gear Recalls Every Parent Should Check This Week

CeAndria Jones

A cluster of baby gear recalls and safety warnings has hit in the past few weeks, and a few of them involve products that are genuinely popular, including a widely used stroller car seat adapter and a stroller from a 2-in-1 travel system.

None of this is cause for panic, but it is exactly the kind of news worth five minutes of your attention.

Below is a rundown of what's been recalled, what the actual risk is, and what to do if you own one of these products. We'll also walk through the two-minute habit that makes catching recalls like these far less stressful going forward.

This Week's Recalls and Warnings at a Glance

Product Hazard Sold At Action
Joolz Aer2 Car Seat Adapters Fall hazard — car seat can detach from stroller Joolz, Bloomingdale's, Nordstrom, Amazon + more 6/2025–5/2026 Stop use, register for refund
B. Childhood High Landscape Stroller Entrapment hazard between seat and grab bar Shein.com + 3rd-party sellers Stop use immediately, dispose
Boon Nursh Baby Bottles (Tomy) Choking hazard — shell peels into plastic film Walmart, 11/2025–5/2026 Stop use, contact Tomy for refund
Little Grape Land Nursing Pillows Suffocation risk from U-shape design Amazon, 8/2025–4/2026 Stop use, contact for refund

Joolz Aer2 Car Seat Adapter Recall: What to Know

Joolz USA Inc. has recalled its Aer2 Car Seat Adapter Sets, used to attach certain infant car seats to the Joolz Aer2 stroller as part of a travel system. The plastic adapters, sold in black sets of two, may fail to properly attach to the stroller chassis, which can allow the car seat to fall.

Only the adapters are affected. The Aer2 stroller itself is not part of the recall. You can identify a recalled adapter by a product identifier beginning with 'NL311,' found on the inside of the adapter.

  • Sold: Bloomingdale’s, Nordstrom, and specialty stores nationwide, and online at www.joolz.com, www.bloomingdales.com, www.nordstrom.com, and www.amazon.com, from June 2025 to May 2026 for about $50.
  • Reported incidents: One report of the car seat adapters detaching from the strollers. No injuries have been reported.
  • What to do: Stop using the adapters immediately and detach them from the stroller. Visit joolzcarseatadapter.expertinquiry.com to register for a full refund. Joolz will provide a video showing how to safely remove the adapters and a prepaid shipping label for return.

B. Childhood 'High Landscape' Stroller: CPSC Safety Warning

The CPSC has issued a warning—not a formal recall, since the seller has not cooperated—urging parents to immediately stop using B. Childhood 'High Landscape' baby strollers. These are black, foldable strollers with gold metal accents and a brown handle and grab bars, sold as part of a 2-in-1 travel system that converts between a stroller seat and a bassinet, with a hand-held infant carrier accessory included.

  • The hazard: An opening between the seat and the grab bar can allow a baby to become entrapped, which violates the mandatory federal stroller safety standard. Affected strollers are marked 'Model Number V9' on a label on the back of the stroller seat.
  • Sold: Shein.com for about $230, and possibly through other third-party marketplace sellers.
  • Status: The CPSC issued a formal Notice of Violation to B. Childhood, based in Chino, California. As of this writing, the company has not responded, which is why this is a CPSC warning rather than a manufacturer-led recall. No refund process has been established.
  • What to do: Stop using this stroller immediately. The CPSC's guidance is direct—dispose of it. Do not sell it, donate it, or give it away, since that would put another family at risk.

Other Recent Recalls Worth a Quick Check

Boon Nursh Baby Bottles

About 40,000 Boon Nursh 8 oz reusable baby bottles, made by Tomy, have been recalled. The hard plastic outer shell can bubble or peel, creating loose, film-like plastic pieces that pose a choking hazard. The bottles were sold in packages of three in a pink tie-dye pattern at Walmart and Walmart.com between November 2025 and May 2026. Tomy has received 135 reports of peeling plastic, with no injuries reported. Affected owners should stop using the bottles and contact Tomy for a $22 store credit or a replacement set in a different color.

Little Grape Land Nursing Pillows

Roughly 1,430 U-shaped Little Grape Land nursing pillows have been recalled for failing to meet mandatory safety standards for nursing pillows and infant support cushions. The design could obstruct an infant's breathing, posing a suffocation risk. These unlabeled pillows were sold on Amazon between August 2025 and April 2026. Owners should stop using the pillow immediately and contact the company for a full refund. Consumers will be asked to cut the pillow in half and send a photo of the destroyed pillow to recall@evermorepartner.com. 

How to Check if Your Baby Gear Has Been Recalled

You do not need to memorize every recall headline—you just need a quick habit. Here's the fastest way to check anything you currently own or are considering buying:

  • Go to CPSC.gov and use the recall search tool with the product name or model number.
  • Use the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration's (NHTSA) Recall Search tool specifically to look up car seat recalls.
  • Sign up for free CPSC email recall alerts so new recalls come straight to your inbox.
  • For car seats specifically, register your seat directly with the manufacturer so you're notified automatically.
  • Check SaferProducts.gov if you want to search consumer-reported incidents, not just official recalls.

This takes about two minutes per product, and it is the single most effective thing you can do to catch a problem before it affects your family.

Why Verification Matters for Open-Box Gear

Several recent recalls and warnings involve products sold through third-party marketplace channels (like Shein), where manufacturer accountability is inconsistent. At Stork Exchange, every item goes through our Stork Stamp of Approval process, including a direct check against current CPSC databases. Items on active recall are never listed. If you're shopping open-box, that safety verification step is exactly what should set a trustworthy source apart from an unverified one.


Quick Answers: Baby Gear Recalls

How do I know if my Joolz car seat adapter is part of the recall?

Look for a product identifier beginning with 'NL311' printed on the inside of the adapter. Only this specific adapter set is recalled—the Aer2 stroller itself is not affected.

Is the B. Childhood stroller a recall or just a warning?

Technically a warning, not a formal recall. The CPSC issued a Notice of Violation to B. Childhood, but the company has not responded or cooperated, so no manufacturer refund process exists. The CPSC's guidance is to stop use immediately and dispose of the stroller rather than resell or donate it.

What's the fastest way to check if any of my baby gear is recalled?

Search the product name and model number directly on CPSC.gov. It takes about a minute per item and is the most reliable way to check, since it pulls directly from official recall data rather than secondhand reporting.

Should I worry about buying secondhand or open-box baby gear because of recalls?

Not if you buy from a source that actively checks for recalls before listing items. The recall risk is highest with unverified marketplace sellers or private secondhand sales where no one has checked the product's status. A vendor with a documented inspection process—checking recall databases as part of every listing—removes most of that risk.


Stay Informed, Not Anxious

Recalls happen because the safety system is working—manufacturers, the CPSC, and watchdog groups are actively catching problems and getting them in front of parents. The goal isn't to feel alarmed every time a new one is announced; it's to build the habit of a quick check before you buy and a quick search if a headline like this catches your eye.

If you currently own a Joolz Aer2 car seat adapter, a B. Childhood High Landscape stroller, or any of the other items mentioned above, take action today. For everything else, bookmark CPSC.gov and make recall-checking part of your normal baby gear routine. It's one of the easiest ways to protect your family with almost no effort at all.

Browse current open-box and overstock baby gear at storkexchange.co — every item is inspected and recall-checked before it ever reaches you.