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Burn hazard Other May 7, 2026

EEMB Lithium Battery Packs Recall — What Parents Should Do

EEMB Lithium Battery Packs Recall — What Parents Should Do
The hazard The lithium coin batteries are in pouches that are not child-resistant as required under Reese's Law. If a child swallows button cell or coin batteries, the ingested batteries can cause serious injuries, including internal chemical burns and death.
What to do Consumers should stop using the lithium batteries immediately, place them in an area that children cannot access and contact EEMB USA to receive a full refund. Note: Button cell and coin batteries are hazardous. Batteries should be disposed of or recycled by following local hazardous waste procedures.
Read the official CPSC notice → Source: CPSC.gov · Always confirm the latest details on the official agency page.

EEMB Lithium Battery Packs has been recalled. The hazard: The lithium coin batteries are in pouches that are not child-resistant as required under Reese's Law. If a child swallows button cell or coin batteries, the ingested batteries can cause serious injuries, including internal chemical burns and death. If you own this, here is what to check and what to do next.

What's being recalled

Product: EEMB Lithium Battery Packs

This recall involves EEMB lithium batteries in individual pouches, models include: CR2025, CR2032, CR2450, CR2477, CR2016, CR1220, CR1225, CR1616, CR1620, CR1632 and CR2025-10. The lithium coin batteries come in a five, ten or twenty size pack. "EEMB" and the battery type is printed on the face of the coin battery. The white pouch has "EEMB" printed in the upper left corner.

The hazard behind the eemb lithium battery packs recall

The lithium coin batteries are in pouches that are not child-resistant as required under Reese's Law. If a child swallows button cell or coin batteries, the ingested batteries can cause serious injuries, including internal chemical burns and death.

(Hazard wording above is quoted directly from the official CPSC notice.)

How to tell if yours is affected

Check the model number and identifying labels described in the official notice before acting. If the details match, treat it as affected. When in doubt, contact the company.

What to do

Consumers should stop using the lithium batteries immediately, place them in an area that children cannot access and contact EEMB USA to receive a full refund. Note: Button cell and coin batteries are hazardous. Batteries should be disposed of or recycled by following local hazardous waste procedures.

Safe disposal (lithium-ion battery)

This device contains a rechargeable lithium-ion battery. Do not put it in the trash, curbside recycling, or store battery-drop boxes. Contact your municipal household hazardous waste (HHW) center and ask if they accept recalled lithium-ion batteries or devices.

What this means for your family

A recall means the issue was caught and the company must make it right, usually at no cost to you. Take the item away from children now, follow the official remedy below, and keep the model and date details handy when you contact the company.

Official notice

For the complete, authoritative details, see the official CPSC recall notice: https://www.cpsc.gov/Recalls/2026/EEMB-USA-Recalls-Battery-Pouches-Due-to-Risk-of-Serious-Injury-or-Death-from-Battery-Ingestion-Violate-Federal-Statute-for-Child-Resistant-Packaging-of-Coin-Batteries


More4Kids compiles recall information from public government notices and links to the official source. We are not a government agency. Always confirm the latest details on the official agency page before acting.

Important: More4Kids compiles recall information from public announcements by the CPSC, FDA, and NHTSA. We summarize these notices in plain language and link to the official source for every recall. We are not a government agency and do not issue recalls. Information may change after publication — always confirm the latest details on the official agency page before acting.