---
title: "IKEA and plug-in product recalls: what Spartanburg households should check today"
url: https://www.herespartanburg.com/ikea-and-plug-in-product-recalls-what-spartanburg-househol/
date: 2026-06-20T06:02:51-04:00
modified: 2026-06-20T06:02:51-04:00
author: "Lainey Castaneda"
categories: ["Home and Garden"]
site: "HERESpartanburg"
attribution: "HERESpartanburg"
---

# IKEA and plug-in product recalls: what Spartanburg households should check today

*Source: [HERESpartanburg](https://www.herespartanburg.com/ikea-and-plug-in-product-recalls-what-spartanburg-househol/) — June 20, 2026 by Lainey Castaneda*

Several recent household-product recalls include items that can show up in everyday homes — and the safest move is to check model numbers, stop using the product if the notice says to, and follow the refund or repair steps. For Spartanburg-area households, recalls are especially worth a quick look when they involve kitchenware or plug-in products that could pose a burn or fire risk.

What was recalled

The recall round-up includes products sold nationally through major retailers, including certain items associated with IKEA. The notices focus on hazards such as chemical exposure concerns, unsafe food-contact materials, and electrical or overheating risks in some plug-in products.

How to check if you’re affected

Start with the simplest check: look for the brand name, product name, and any item number on the label, packaging, or underside of the product. For plug-in items, the rating label near the cord or base often includes identifying information.

If you’re not sure, take a clear photo of the label and compare it to the recall notice details. If the notice lists a range of dates or batch codes, verify those too — the same-looking product can have both recalled and non-recalled versions.

What to do if you have a recalled item

• Follow the ‘stop use’ instruction immediately if the notice includes one.

• Keep the product out of reach of children and pets until you complete the return, disposal, or repair steps.

• Use the recall’s official remedy process (refund, replacement, repair kit, or disposal instructions).

A common mistake is trying a DIY fix for an electrical or heating product. If the remedy offers a replacement part or refund, use that route instead of continuing to operate something that could overheat.

Why it matters

Recalls are issued when regulators or companies identify a risk pattern that isn’t always obvious in day-to-day use. Even if your item hasn’t shown problems, checking now can prevent an avoidable injury or property damage later — especially heading into a hot-weather stretch when fans and small appliances get heavier use.
