CPSC Pool Drain Cover Recall Ledger: VGBA Entrapment And Drowning Hazard Cluster
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Status, June 30 source check: source-cleared for a BadPD CPSC pool and spa drain-cover recall ledger. This roundup uses six official CPSC recall notices involving Arrogantf, Houoto, Broqixin, Superbobi, Earthtec, and Yeeluzan pool or spa drain covers. Each notice ties the recalled drain cover to Virginia Graeme Baker Pool and Spa Safety Act entrapment or drowning hazards. Each notice lists a refund remedy. Each notice says no incidents or injuries had been reported.
This is public-safety reporting, not pool-installation advice. Pool owners, spa owners, service companies, hotels, rentals, schools, gyms, homeowner associations, camp operators, and public facilities should use the official CPSC notices, seller recall contacts, and qualified pool or spa professionals to verify affected products and remedies. BadPD is preserving the public records because the pattern is bigger than any one Amazon listing.
Why The Cluster Matters
The Virginia Graeme Baker Pool and Spa Safety Act is not paperwork for paperwork’s sake. Drain-cover standards are intended to reduce entrapment and drowning hazards. A noncompliant cover can be hard for an ordinary pool owner to identify after purchase because it may look like a generic white plastic cover, especially once it is installed or stored without packaging. The danger is also seasonal. A cover bought months earlier can become relevant when a pool or spa reopens, a rental property turns over, or a service company replaces parts before summer use.
The CPSC cluster shows the same public-accountability problem across multiple sellers and brands: inexpensive drain covers sold online, usually through Amazon, with refund remedies and contact emails after CPSC says the products violate or fail VGBA-related safety requirements. The public record does not show that every buyer received notice, that every recalled cover was removed from use, or that every product page was permanently blocked from relisting under a new seller name.
The Six CPSC Records
The newest record in this source set is the June 16, 2026 Arrogantf Spa Drain Covers recall, recall number 26-563. CPSC says about 340 units are affected. The recalled product is a white spa or hot-tub suction cover sold as Hot Tub Jet Cover, Spa Drain Covers. CPSC says the product was sold on Amazon.com from September 2025 through March 2026 for about $16 by Shenzhen Fuxiangyue Technology Co., Ltd., doing business as Arrogantf, of China.
The June 11, 2026 Houoto 642-2150V Pool Drain Covers recall, recall number 26-555, lists about 595 units. CPSC says the drain covers do not bear required product markings, violate the mandatory safety standard under the VGBA, and are missing statements about service life plus installation and maintenance instructions. CPSC says the covers were sold on Amazon.com from January 2026 through May 2026 for about $18. The listed manufacturer is Foshan Nanhai District Haichen Tengfei Hardware Factory, and the retailer is Tingting Specialty Store, doing business as Prosperity goes straight up, of China.
The June 4, 2026 Broqixin Pool Drain Covers recall, recall number 26-529, lists about 370 units. CPSC says the white plastic drain covers measure about 7.36 inches in diameter, weigh about 3.84 ounces, come with two screws, and have “Model 11064W” printed on the product packaging. The covers were sold on Amazon.com from January 2026 through April 2026 for about $16 by Weifang Dingshengxin Electric Technology Co., Ltd., doing business as Broqixin, of China.
The May 14, 2026 Superbobi Pool Drain Covers recall, recall number 26-480, lists about 200 units. CPSC says the recalled covers are 7 3/8 inches in diameter, weigh 4.6 ounces, come with two screws, and are white ABS plastic. The products were sold on Amazon.com from September 2025 through March 2026 for about $15. CPSC lists Shenzhen Jiangtou Technology Co., Ltd., doing business as Remy&shop, as manufacturer.
The April 30, 2026 Earthtec Pool Drain Covers recall, recall number 26-451, lists about 211 units. CPSC says the Earthtec 7 3/8 inch pool drain covers were sold for swimming pools, are white ABS plastic, and come with two screws. CPSC says they were sold on Amazon.com from October 2025 through April 2026 for about $15. The listed manufacturer is Shenzhen Qiangonghui Technology Co., Ltd., doing business as Tonyidea.
The April 9, 2026 Yeeluzan Pool Drain Covers recall, recall number 26-397, lists about 640 units. CPSC says the recalled Yeeluzan-branded covers measure about 8.7 inches in diameter, weigh 1.7 pounds, are white ABS plastic, and were sold in two-packs. The products were sold on Amazon.com from May 2025 through March 2026 for about $32 by Weifang Luzhan Trade Co., Ltd., doing business as Yeeluzan, of China.
Confirmed, Reported, Pending, Not Established
Confirmed by official CPSC notices
- CPSC published six pool or spa drain-cover recalls in this cluster between April 9 and June 16, 2026.
- All six notices cite entrapment and drowning hazards tied to VGBA safety requirements.
- All six notices list refund as the remedy.
- All six notices say no incidents or injuries had been reported.
- All six notices identify products manufactured in China.
Reported by CPSC product and sale fields
- Arrogantf: about 340 spa drain covers, sold on Amazon from September 2025 through March 2026.
- Houoto: about 595 pool drain covers, sold on Amazon from January 2026 through May 2026.
- Broqixin: about 370 pool drain covers, sold on Amazon from January 2026 through April 2026.
- Superbobi: about 200 pool drain covers, sold on Amazon from September 2025 through March 2026.
- Earthtec: about 211 pool drain covers, sold on Amazon from October 2025 through April 2026.
- Yeeluzan: about 640 pool drain covers, sold on Amazon from May 2025 through March 2026.
Pending records
- Amazon buyer-notification proof for each seller or listing.
- Refund completion counts and response rates.
- Proof that recalled listing pages and lookalike relistings were removed or blocked.
- Any CPSC remedy complaints if buyers cannot reach the listed seller email addresses.
- Any later incident, injury, or expanded recall notices.
Not established by this source set
- Whether every recalled cover has been removed from installed pools or spas.
- Whether every buyer still has the original packaging needed to identify the product.
- Whether any specific pool, spa, rental, hotel, school, gym, or HOA is using one of the recalled covers.
- Whether Amazon or any seller failed to provide direct notice beyond what CPSC published.
BadPD Record Demand
The missing accountability records are straightforward: buyer-notification counts, refund counts, listing-removal proof, relisting controls, and remedy-complaint tracking. CPSC has the official recall records. Sellers have email addresses. Amazon has transaction data. Pool and spa operators have maintenance logs. If the recall system is working, those records should be able to show how many buyers were contacted and how many recalled covers were removed from circulation.
BadPD will watch for additional CPSC drain-cover recalls, especially if the same product design, seller cluster, manufacturer, or marketplace pathway appears again under a new label. The public should not have to memorize obscure seller names to stay safe. The stronger pattern is that low-cost online drain covers can enter pools and spas without compliant markings or entrapment-protection proof, and the recall notice may come months after purchase.
For now, the source-cleared record is narrow: six CPSC notices, refund remedy, no incidents reported, about 2,356 units across the six listed U.S. quantities, and a shared VGBA entrapment/drowning hazard frame. Anything beyond that needs a later CPSC record, seller statement, marketplace record, court filing, or accountable local reporting.
Why Buyer Notice Is The Hard Part
These are not large branded appliances sitting in a living room with a serial number plate that an owner sees every day. Several CPSC descriptions say the recalled covers are plain white ABS plastic, sometimes sold with two screws, and sometimes identified mainly by packaging, order receipt, or an online listing. That matters because packaging can be thrown away before a recall is published. A pool service company can install a part and leave no product bag behind. A rental owner can inherit a pool part from a prior operator and not know which online seller supplied it.
That is why marketplace records matter. CPSC can publish the recall, but the fastest buyer-notification path is the transaction record held by the platform and seller. The practical question is whether every buyer received a direct email, account notice, refund path, and clear warning not to keep using the recalled cover. A public CPSC page is necessary, but it is not proof that the warning reached the person who bought or installed the product.
What Operators Should Document
BadPD is not telling anyone how to inspect or install a drain cover. That work belongs with CPSC instructions, the seller or manufacturer recall contact, local code requirements, and qualified pool or spa professionals. The accountability documentation is different. Operators can record whether a pool or spa has a drain-cover inventory, whether old purchase records were checked for the six recall names, whether service contractors were asked to verify parts, and whether any recalled cover was removed, replaced, or refunded.
For public-facing properties, the record demand is higher. Hotels, gyms, apartment complexes, short-term rentals, schools, camps, HOAs, and municipal pools should be able to show that they checked recent online drain-cover purchases and maintenance logs after a VGBA recall cluster. The CPSC records do not say any specific venue has a recalled cover. They do show enough official risk language to justify a basic documented check before people are allowed back into a pool or spa area.
Why The Houoto Record Is Slightly Different
Most of the source records use the same core language: the recalled covers violate entrapment protection standards under the VGBA and pose entrapment and drowning hazards. The Houoto record adds more detail. CPSC says the covers do not bear required product markings and are missing statements about service life and installation and maintenance instructions. That is important because the product marking and instruction problem is a traceability problem as well as a safety problem.
If a cover has no usable markings or lacks service-life information, it becomes harder for the next owner, service technician, property manager, or inspector to know whether it belongs in a pool or spa. The recall remedy is still refund, according to CPSC. The accountability issue is broader: online listings should not be able to substitute for permanent product markings and instructions when the product is part of an entrapment-protection system.
What Would Change This Ledger
This ledger should be updated if CPSC posts additional drain-cover recalls, if any of the six recall numbers receive incident updates, if remedy complaints appear, or if Amazon, sellers, manufacturers, or regulators publish direct-notification or refund-completion data. It should also be updated if a later record links one of these seller names, manufacturers, model numbers, or product descriptions to another marketplace listing.
Until that happens, the correct label remains narrow and official: recalled pool or spa drain covers, VGBA entrapment and drowning hazard, refund remedy, no incidents reported, source-cleared by CPSC. The public-safety task is to make the cluster searchable by product names, seller names, recall numbers, and the exact hazard language, so future owners and operators can find it when they check their maintenance records.
Source Ledger
- CPSC, Arrogantf Spa Drain Covers recall, June 16, 2026
- CPSC, Houoto 642-2150V Pool Drain Covers recall, June 11, 2026
- CPSC, Broqixin Pool Drain Covers recall, June 4, 2026
- CPSC, Superbobi Pool Drain Covers recall, May 14, 2026
- CPSC, Earthtec Pool Drain Covers recall, April 30, 2026
- CPSC, Yeeluzan Pool Drain Covers recall, April 9, 2026
Featured image is symbolic editorial artwork created for BadPD. It is not CPSC product photography and is not a depiction of any specific recalled drain cover, pool, spa, seller, manufacturer, or consumer.
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