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Amazon’s Choice CO Detector Removed From Site After Reports of Hospitalizations

The detector was sold under the Hembisen brand and failed to alert residents to dangerous levels of carbon monoxide. CR recommends buying from known, reputable brands.

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Screenshot of a "4-in-1 Natural-Gas-Leak-Detector & Carbon-Monoxide-Detector" that is labeled as "Amazon's Choice" and on sale for $34.99.
The Hembisen detector, which has since been removed from Amazon's site, was purchased thousands of times.
Source: Amazon

Consumers should check their orders for carbon monoxide (CO) detectors purchased from online marketplaces, including Amazon, after Consumer Reports tied an Amazon’s Choice CO detector to reports of hospitalizations. According to reports made to the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC), the device failed to alert users to dangerous levels of CO.

After spotting the complaints on the CPSC website, Consumer Reports notified Amazon, requesting action, and Amazon responded, noting that “the products in question have been removed while we investigate the safety signals in question.”

“We require all products offered in our store to comply with applicable laws, regulations, and Amazon policies,” the company stated.

More on CO Safety

The plug-in CO detector cited in the reports was sold under the brand name Hembisen and model number KH-158. The four-in-one product was marketed for general home use and claimed to measure temperature and humidity and detect CO and combustible gas.

If you own one of the detectors, you should return it to Amazon, request a refund, and replace it with a top-rated model from our ratings. (See below.)

“People rely on CO detectors for their life-saving capabilities,” says Gabe Knight, a senior safety policy analyst for Consumer Reports. “The perception, until proven otherwise, is that it’s working. That leads to a false sense of security.” 

The detector was purchased more than 4,000 times in the month prior to its removal from Amazon’s website. It had received more than 800 product reviews and was given an Amazon’s Choice designation and featured by Amazon influencers. 

At the time of publication, similar or identical-looking CO detectors remained available for sale on Amazon from both the Hembisen retailer and other third-party sellers under brand names such as KH Alert, Koabbit, Vilfet, and Yojock. 

The reports were received by the CPSC between late February and early March, and all claim the detector failed to warn residents of dangerous CO levels—leading to illness and the hospitalizations of at least four people, including two children and one senior. 

In separate incidents in February, a 15-year-old and a 14-year-old were treated for potential CO poisoning. “The device failed to sound any alarm or show any elevated readings while CO levels had reached life-threatening concentrations,” states one report filed using the CPSC’s SaferProducts.gov, a public database for reporting and searching user-submitted complaints about potentially dangerous products.

In March, a 60-year-old man was hospitalized under similar circumstances. “Family members began experiencing symptoms consistent with carbon monoxide exposure, including dizziness and difficulty breathing,” according to that report

“Most people don’t know to report unsafe products to SaferProducts.gov, so the fact that there are four reported incidents in a month linked to the same model indicates this may be a very widespread issue,” Knight says.

Consumers cited similar safety issues among the dozens of one-star reviews left on the product’s Amazon page. In a review posted in February, one stated that the detector, plugged in next to her home’s furnace, failed to identify a CO leak that an HVAC company later discovered. “My family had been waking up with headaches frequently and feeling tired from what we now know was chronic carbon monoxide exposure,” the review says. 

In an October 2025 review, a user complained about a false alarm that prompted a call to a local gas company. An employee of the company recognized the brand name. “Before even seeing it,” the review states, “he told me he had two false alarms within the past week in our city.”

The risk of faulty CO detectors sold on third-party retail sites such as Amazon and Walmart is a growing concern. 

In 2021, the CPSC filed an administrative complaint against Amazon, citing over 400,000 defective or noncompliant products, including 24,000 CO detectors that had failed to alarm. And the CPSC’s recalls page lists numerous actions and warnings tied to faulty CO detectors.

There is no mandatory safety standard for CO detectors, but reputable manufacturers ensure that their models are certified to meet the voluntary UL 2034 standard, which sets strict requirements for how quickly a detector sounds an alarm based on the CO concentration level. 

The models cited in the CPSC reports have not been tested by Consumer Reports. 

How to Stay Safe from Carbon Monoxide 

It’s best to purchase a CO detector from a reputable brand and retailer. A detector installed in your home should be certified by a testing organization, like UL Solutions (formerly Underwriters Laboratories) or Intertek Electrical Testing Labs (ETL). Models with a UL or ETL mark on the product or box, for example, meet the UL 2034 safety standard. 

Some CO detectors are designed to discern lower levels of CO than models made for general home installation. These models, often marketed as portable detectors, can serve as early-detection tools or safety measures while you travel. Unlike regular home models, they can alert you to CO levels below 30 parts per million. They don’t replace the need for certified CO detectors installed in your home, though.

Accidental CO poisoning causes more than 400 deaths and leads to more than 100,000 emergency room visits in the U.S. every year, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says. At 400 parts per million, carbon monoxide can cause fatal injury within hours. Early symptoms of CO exposure include headache, dizziness, nausea, and fatigue. It’s important to install CO detectors on all levels of your home and outside any sleeping areas. 

“Carbon monoxide alarms are life-saving devices, not ordinary household products,” says Charon McNabb, founder of the National Carbon Monoxide Awareness Association. “Consumers deserve confidence that the alarms they purchase have been properly evaluated to recognized standards.” 

Of course, purchasing a certified detector from a reputable brand doesn’t guarantee that the device won’t malfunction. So try to test CO detectors weekly and replace them every five years. 

If you believe a CO detector you’ve purchased is faulty or has failed to warn you of CO exposure, you can report the issue to the CPSC on SaferProducts.gov. While not the same as a product recall, it can lead to further CPSC investigation and raise manufacturer and public awareness of an issue. 

CR’s safety experts have alerted the CPSC of the incident reports regarding the Hembisen CO detectors sold on Amazon and asked the agency to investigate.

Top-Rated Models

Below is our highest-scoring stand-alone detector, interconnected system detector, and combination smoke and CO detector.


Courtney Lindwall

Courtney Lindwall is a writer at Consumer Reports. Since joining CR in 2023, she’s covered the latest on cell phones, smartwatches, and fitness trackers as part of the tech team. Previously, Courtney reported on environmental and climate issues for the Natural Resources Defense Council. She lives in Brooklyn, N.Y.