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4our Kiddies Plastic Tip Restraint Kits Recall (2026)

The 4our Kiddies Plastic Tip Restraint Kits was recalled in 2026 by the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) over the recalled plastic tip restraint kits (also referred to as furniture straps) can break or degrade, posing tip-over and entrapment hazards that can result in serious injuries or death to children or elderly consumers interacting with furniture that is secured to the wall with the defective plastic tip restraints. this is a hidden defect because consumers who purchase and install this product may be under a false sense of security that their furniture is safe from a tip-over incident.. If you own this product, you may be entitled to a free repair, replacement, or refund — here's exactly what to do.

What was recalled

This recall involves defective plastic tip restraint kits (also referred to as furniture straps) manufactured by 4our Kiddies. The recalled tip restraint kits contain two white plastic brackets/mounts (one for connection to furniture and the other for connection to the wall), a white plastic cable zip tie, two different pairs of screws (one longer than the other) and two drywall anchors. The plastic in the brackets/mounts and the cable zip tie can break or degrade over time, which could lead to furniture tipping over if a consumer interacts with furniture that was secured by the recalled product. CPSC testing revealed that the recalled plastic tip restraints failed to meet the requirements of the industry standard for tip restraints. CPSC's Anchor It! website, www.anchorit.gov/, has educational materials available to the public, including important instructions for properly anchoring furniture to prevent tip-overs.

The hazard

The CPSC flagged the following risk:

What to do if you own this product

The recall remedy:

Consumer contact: 4our Kiddies by email at furniturestraps-recall@outlook.com.

Official CPSC recall notice: Read the full recall on CPSC.gov.

Keep your proof of purchase — most recall remedies require it. If you can't find your receipt, here's how to handle a claim without one.

How to check your other products for recalls

Recalls are announced constantly, and most people never hear about the ones affecting products they already own. The fastest way to stay covered is to keep a list of what you own and check it against the CPSC database automatically.

See our guide on how to check any product for a recall, or let CoverKeep do it for you — it scans everything you own against the CPSC database every day and alerts you the moment there's a match.

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CoverKeep checks your products against the CPSC recall database every day and alerts you instantly. Free on the App Store.

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Frequently asked questions

How do I know if my 4our Kiddies Plastic Tip Restraint Kits is part of the recall?

Check the model number and purchase date against the affected units listed above, and confirm on the official CPSC notice. If it matches, you're covered by the remedy.

Does a recall mean a free replacement?

Often yes. Recall remedies are typically a free repair, replacement, or refund — you generally don't pay, even if the product is out of warranty. Recall rights are separate from the manufacturer's warranty.

What if I already got rid of the receipt?

Many recall remedies still work with a photo of the product, the model/serial number, or a card statement. Here's how to prove a purchase without the original receipt.

Source: U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC). CoverKeep is not affiliated with the CPSC or any manufacturer. Always confirm details on the official recall notice.