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    Over 300,000 Cosco Kitchen Stepper Stools Recalled for Fall and Injury Hazards

    Young children have fallen when the rear 'safety bar' detaches

    Recalled Cosco 2-Step Kitchen Steppers on grey background Photo: CPSC

    Dorel Home Furnishings announced on Thursday that it is recalling over 300,000 of its Cosco Kitchen Stepper stools and will offer customers a free repair kit to improve their design. The company says it received dozens of reports of the “safety bar” detaching or breaking, “posing serious fall and injury hazards.” 

    The Cosco 2-Step Kitchen Stepper stool resembles other folding stools commonly used by adults but has a thin bar across the back that is meant to enclose the standing area when used by children. It’s marketed as a way to involve children in everyday household work, for instance by standing at the kitchen counter. “The railings provide perfect support while the locking safety bar provides a sense of security,” reads a description on the product’s Amazon page.

    However, CR’s experts say that this product should not have been marketed for use by kids. At least 34 customers have contacted the company and the Consumer Product Safety Commission with stories of the safety bar detaching or breaking with normal use. Online reviewers have shared similar stories; some customers report that their toddlers have gotten broken arms, split lips, and concussions from falling out of these Cosco stools.

    More on Child Safety

    In August 2024, the grandparent of a 19-month-old boy reported to the CPSC that the child had fallen backward onto a hard tile floor, landing on his side, after the safety bar detached when he “leaned slightly backwards” while eating lunch at the kitchen counter. The grandparent added that the same thing had happened with another Cosco stool at their daughter’s house.

    “Warning: The safety bar is totally useless!” reads a one-star negative review from August 2024. “My toddler doesn’t even need to touch it, even the lightest vibration from him shifting his weight between his feet causes the bar to knock out of place and fall down. It happened once when he was leaning back on it—as he should safely be able to do—and he fell backward and got hurt. . . . I won’t be surprised if it is soon recalled.”

    “The safety bar does not latch securely at all. I was standing right beside my toddler supervising her, and she still fell off and broke her arm when the safety bar gave out,” wrote another customer named Katie in June 2025. “We purchased this because we wanted a foldable toddler tower to store when we weren’t using it, but I seriously regret not buying something sturdier.”

    When CR reached out to Dorel to ask whether the company would consider providing refunds for unhappy customers rather than a repair kit, a representative responded that refunds should not be necessary because “the stepper is a functioning step stool without the use of the safety bar, which is optional.”

    “Functioning step stool or not, parents bought this product because they thought the safety bar would help keep their children safe,” says Gabe Knight, senior safety analyst for CR. “It is deeply disappointing that Dorel isn’t offering its customers the option to receive a full refund as part of this recall.”

    If you own one of these, you should detach the safety bar, stop letting children use it, and store it safely away from children until you are able to repair it. The company’s website has an online form to fill out to receive the free repair kit, which Cosco says will attach a locking mechanism to the safety bar to prevent the safety bar from detaching or breaking during use. The kit will also include an additional warning label to place onto the product about how to lock the safety bar. You should report any safety issues you have with this product to the CPSC at SaferProducts.gov.

    “The so-called safety bar on the Cosco Kitchen Stepper stool gave parents a false sense of security, but injury reports from consumers make clear that Dorel never should have advertised this product as suitable for use by children,” says Knight. “Caretakers should always stay within arm’s length of a child when they’re using a stepping stool or learning tower. Falls and injuries can happen in the blink of an eye.” 

    Consumer Reports is currently testing the safety of several popular children’s learning towers, also known as toddler towers, for an upcoming project. Our results will be out later this summer.

    split image of Cosco logo molded onto handle and model information located on label on arm of recalled Cosco 2-step kitchen stepper

    Photos: CPSC Photos: CPSC

    Details of the Cosco Kitchen Stepper Stools Recall

    Product recalled: About 302,000 step stools that were sold in the U.S. and about 11,000 sold in Canada. This recall applies to the model numbers 11349WHG1E, 11349GRN1E, 11349NVY1E, 11349WHG2, 11349GRN4, 11349GRN12, 11349WHG12C, 11349WHG12W, 11349WHG4F, and 11349CBWH4T. The stools are sold in white/gray, green, navy, and blue. 

    Sold at: BJ’s Wholesale Club, Home Depot, Lowe’s, Target, and Walmart stores nationwide and online at Amazon, overstock.com, and wayfair.com from February 2021 through July 2025 for between $56 and $70.

    The problem: The safety bar on one side of the stool can detach or break, posing a fall/injury risk. Cosco has received 34 reports of the safety bar detaching or breaking, including two incidents that resulted in head injuries.

    The fix: Go to the Cosco website to fill out a form to receive a free repair kit for the stool, which will attach a sliding locking mechanism to the safety bar. The kit will also include an additional warning label to attach to the stool. Until your stool is repaired, take the safety bar off of it and don’t let children use the stool.

    How to contact the manufacturer: Go to Cosco’s recall page or call the company at 888-628-3778 from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. ET Monday through Friday.

    To report a dangerous product or a product-related injury, go to SaferProducts.gov.


    Lauren Kirchner

    Lauren Kirchner is an investigative reporter on the special projects team at Consumer Reports. She has been with CR since 2022, covering product safety. She has previously reported on algorithmic bias, criminal justice, and housing for the Markup and ProPublica, and was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in Explanatory Reporting in 2017. Send her tips at lauren.kirchner@consumer.org and follow her on X: @lkirchner.