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Feds Sound Alarm As 125K Cosyland Kid Towers Recalled Over Scary Tip-Overs

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Published on May 14, 2026
Feds Sound Alarm As 125K Cosyland Kid Towers Recalled Over Scary Tip-OversSource: U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission

Federal safety officials are sounding the alarm after reports that Cosyland children’s tower stools can suddenly collapse or tip while kids are standing inside. The company is recalling 125,200 of the wooden towers and urging parents to stop using the affected stools around children until free repair parts arrive or other remedies are offered.

The recall, posted today, covers Cosyland-branded models CS0003 and CS0092-4 that were sold on Amazon from April 2021 through November 2025 for about $70, according to the Consumer Product Safety Commission. The agency says the side openings on the stools are large enough for a child’s torso to slip through and warns the units can collapse or tip, creating both entrapment and fall hazards.

What the recall covers

The CPSC has logged 25 reports of the stools being unstable or falling and eight people getting hurt, with injuries ranging from scrapes and bruises to a broken arm. Cosyland says it will mail protective nets, stabilizing feet and installation instructions to consumers at no cost, and it is telling owners to keep the towers out of use until those fixes are installed.

How to tell if your stool is affected

Parents are being told to check for model numbers CS0003 or CS0092-4 and a “COSYLAND” label. The recalled stools were sold in natural bamboo and gray finishes and measure about 16 inches deep by 18 inches wide and 35 inches tall, the CPSC says. If you spot one in your kitchen or play area, stop using it immediately, store it where kids cannot reach it and contact Cosyland for the free repair kit or further instructions.

A pattern of toddler-tower recalls

This Cosyland action follows a string of smaller toddler-tower recalls in April that removed nearly 13,000 similar towers from the market after dozens of reports of collapses and entrapment, a trend chronicled by Consumer Reports and regional outlets like the Houston Chronicle. Safety advocates say the repeated recalls underline design and quality-control problems for inexpensive learning towers sold online, and regulators have been ramping up their scrutiny of the category.

What parents should do now

For now, parents are being told to sideline any Cosyland learning tower, verify the model number and label, and only put it back into service after following the recall instructions. Cosyland lists its contact information and recall details on its website, Cosyland. If a child has already been injured, officials advise seeking medical care, documenting what happened and filing a report at SaferProducts.gov so federal investigators and other parents can see the incident on record.