CPSC2025-02-27

Costway Recalls Babyjoy High Chairs Due to Entrapment and Suffocation Hazards; Ban on Inclined Sleepers and Violation of Federal Regulations for High Chairs

Goplus Corporation, dba Costway, of Fontana, California
Hazard

The recalled high chairs pose a fatal suffocation risk because they were marketed, intended, or designed for infant sleep, and they have an incline angle greater than 10 degrees in violation of the federal Safe Sleep for Babies Act. In addition, the high chair poses a deadly entrapment hazard because the opening between the seat and tray is large enough that a child can become entrapped in it, which is a violation of the federal regulations for high chairs.

Remedy
Consumers should immediately stop using the recalled high chairs and contact Costway for a full refund and instructions on how to return or dispose of the high chairs. Consumers can return the product by receiving a prepaid shipping label or provide photos of the destroyed product to recall@costway.com. Upon receipt of the returned product or photos of the destroyed product, Costway will issue the refund. Costway is contacting all known purchasers directly.
Sold at
Online at Amazon.com, Walmart.com, Costway.com and Shein.com from November 2022 through November 2024 for between $70 and $110.
Affected count
About 4,400
Injuries reported
None reported
Manufactured in
China
Remedy type
Refund
Products
Babyjoy High Chairs
Consumer contact
Costway toll-free at 844-242-1885 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. PT Monday through Friday, email at recall@costway.com, or online at https://www.costway.com/recall-high-chair or www.costway.com and click on recall for more information.

Official notice

https://www.cpsc.gov/Recalls/2025/Costway-Recalls-Babyjoy-High-Chairs-Due-to-Entrapment-and-Suffocation-Hazards-Ban-on-Inclined-Sleepers-and-Violation-of-Federal-Regulations-for-High-Chairs

Don't want to check this manually?

We email you a Sunday digest of new federal recalls relevant to parents — free, no credit card. Or upgrade to as-it-happens alerts for the brands you actually own.

Get the Sunday Brief