Pool Drain Covers Recalled Due to Risk of Serious Injury or Death from Entrapment and Drowning Hazards; Violates Virginia Graeme Baker Pool & Spa Safety Act; Sold on Amazon by Broqixin
By MPB Safety Desk · Reviewed by Faruk Talmaç
Hazard
The recalled drain covers violate the entrapment protection standards of the?Virginia Graeme Baker Pool and Spa Safety Act (VGBA), posing deadly entrapment and drowning hazards to swimmers and bathers.
What parents need to know
This recall involves Broqixin-branded white plastic pool drain covers. These covers are approximately 7.36 inches in diameter and weigh about 3.84 ounces, and they come with two screws.
The recalled drain covers have been found to violate safety standards designed to prevent entrapment. This violation poses a serious risk of entrapment and drowning for swimmers and bathers, particularly children.
If you have these drain covers, please stop using pools equipped with them immediately. You should then consult the official recall notice for specific instructions on how to receive a full refund. It is important to ensure all pools and spas have drain covers that meet safety regulations and to teach children to stay away from pool drains.
Recall details
From the official U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission record
- Recall number
- #26529
- Recall date
- Units affected
- About 370
- Remedy
- Pool owners, pool operators and consumers should stop using pools with the recalled pool drain covers immediately and contact Broqixin for a full refund. Consumers will be asked to remove the drain cover from the pool, write in permanent maker "Recalled" on the removed cover, and send a photo of the marked cover [email protected]. Ensure all pools and spas have VGBA-compliant drain covers and teach children to stay away from drains.; Refund
- Products and models
- Broqixin Pool Drain Covers
- Sold at
- Online at Amazon.com from January 2026 through April 2026 for about $16.
- Consumer contact
- Broqixin by email at [email protected].
Recall details are summarized from official government sources and reviewed by our editors before publishing. Information can change after publication — always confirm the current status, affected models, and remedy instructions in the official U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission notice before acting.