Autobrush Recalls Sonic Pro Children's Toothbrush Boxes Due to Battery Ingestion Hazard; Violates Mandatory Standard
Summary
About 48,000 Autobrush Sonic Pro Kids toothbrush boxes are being recalled because the delivery box's white tray contains a coin cell battery that can be easily accessed by children, posing an ingestion hazard and violating the mandatory standard for consumer products containing button cell and coin batteries under Reese's Law. No injuries have been reported. Affected consumers should immediately stop using the boxes, take them away from children, and contact Autobrush for a $5 store credit refund.
“Consumers should stop using the boxes for the toothbrushes immediately, take them away from children and contact Autobrush for a $5 refund in the form of store credit.”
About this source
The Consumer Product Safety Commission publishes recalls of consumer products that pose substantial risk of injury or death. This feed tracks every recall as it is announced: children's products, household appliances, furniture, power tools, batteries, electronics, personal care items, and the steady stream of imported products found to violate US safety standards. Around 60 recalls a month. Each announcement includes the product description, hazard, units affected, injuries reported, and consumer instructions (return, repair, or refund). Watch this if you import or distribute consumer products, run a retail compliance program, advise plaintiffs' counsel on product liability, or manage supply-chain recall exposure.
What changed
The CPSC ordered a recall of Autobrush Sonic Pro Kids toothbrush boxes after determining the delivery box's white tray contains a lithium coin battery that can be easily accessed by children, and the packaging lacks required warning labels as mandated by Reese's Law. The recall applies to approximately 48,000 units sold online at TryAutobrush.com from March 2023 through December 2025 for $85–$90. Importer Lander Enterprises LLC (dba Autobrush) of Miami, Florida is named in the recall.
Manufacturers of consumer products containing coin or button cell batteries should verify that their packaging meets the mandatory safety and labeling requirements under Reese's Law, including secure battery containment and required warning statements. Retailers and importers should audit existing inventory for compliance with these standards to avoid similar enforcement action.
What to do next
- Consumers should stop using the boxes for the toothbrushes immediately, take them away from children and contact Autobrush for a $5 refund in the form of store credit.
- Consumers will be asked to write "Recalled" with permanent marker on the box and send a photo of the marked box to recall-support@autobrush.com.
- Consumers should then dispose of the box.
Archived snapshot
Apr 23, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
Autobrush Recalls Sonic Pro Children’s Toothbrush Boxes Due to Risk of Serious Injury or Death from Battery Ingestion; Violates Mandatory Standard for Consumer Products with Coin Batteries
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Recalled Children’s Autobrush Kids Sonic Pro Toothbrush Delivery Box - Lenni the Lion
The delivery box’s white tray of the recalled Autobrush Kids Sonic Pro Children’s Toothbrush has a speaker with a coin cell battery on the underside.
Recalled Children’s Autobrush Kids Sonic Pro Toothbrush Delivery Box - Unity the Unicorn
Recalled Children’s Autobrush Kids Sonic Pro Toothbrush Delivery Box - Harley the Hippo
Recalled Children’s Autobrush Kids Sonic Pro Toothbrush Delivery Box - Danny the Dinosaur
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- Name of Product: Autobrush Sonic Pro Kids Toothbrush Boxes Hazard: The recalled delivery boxes violate the mandatory standard for consumer products containing button cell and coin batteries because they contain a lithium coin battery that can be easily accessed by children, posing an ingestion hazard. The packaging also does not bear the required warning labels for products containing such batteries as required by Reese’s Law. If button cell or coin batteries are swallowed, the ingested batteries can cause serious injuries, including internal chemical burns, and death.
Remedy: Refund Recall Date: April 23, 2026 Units: About 48,000
Consumer Contact Autobrush toll-free at 844-656-3217 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. ET Monday through Friday, email at recall-support@autobrush.com, or online at tryautobrush.com/pages/recall or www.tryautobrush.com and click “Recall” at the bottom of the page for more information.
Recall Details
Description: This recall involves Autobrush’s Sonic Pro Kids toothbrush boxes used as packaging for delivering children’s toothbrushes. The electric toothbrushes consist of a u-shaped mouthpiece and a plastic base with an animal’s face that matches the model’s name: Unity the Unicorn, Lenni the Lion, Harley the Hippo and Danny the Dino. The light-up, musical toothbrushes have a built-in timer and three brush settings and were sold with a USB cable, a magnetic plug and decoration stickers inside a cardboard delivery box. The delivery box’s white tray has a speaker with a coin cell battery on the underside. Additionally, “autobrush KIDS,” the toothbrush’s model name and an animal image that corresponds to the model are printed on the box.
Remedy: Consumers should stop using the boxes for the toothbrushes immediately, take them away from children and contact Autobrush for a $5 refund in the form of store credit. Consumers will be asked to write “Recalled” with permanent marker on the box and send a photo of the marked box to recall-support@autobrush.com. Consumers should then dispose of the box.
Note: Button cell batteries are hazardous. Batteries should be disposed of or recycled by following local hazardous waste procedures.
Incidents/Injuries: None reported
Sold Online At: TryAutobrush.com from March 2023 through December 2025 for between $85 and $90. Importer(s): Lander Enterprises LLC, dba Autobrush, of Miami, Florida
Manufactured In: China Recall number: 26-434
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