GLOBAL BRIEF
Portable kettle warning: if it is Sekaer, unplug it today
GLOBAL LANGUAGES
Briefings by language
Only translations that preserve official sources and action checks are linked.
What this is based on
- Checked: 2026-06-13 10:37 KST
- Sources: CPSC product safety warning dated June 11, 2026, CPSC recalls index, SaferProducts reporting system
Who should read this
- People using portable electric kettles in dorms, offices, studios, or while traveling
- Households that buy small appliances from Amazon, Walmart, eBay, or Sears
- Anyone with imported, gifted, or stored travel appliances that have not been checked recently
What matters first
On June 11, 2026, the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission warned consumers to stop using Sekaer electric kettles immediately. This is not about a minor leak or cosmetic defect. The agency says hot water or steam can suddenly burst out as pressure builds inside the unit, creating a risk of serious burn injury or death.
The warning stands out because it is tied to a large number of actual incident reports. CPSC says it knows of 116 reports of hot water or steam suddenly ejecting from these kettles, including 89 reports of second- or third-degree burns. That moves this well past a theoretical safety concern.
The warning covers portable Sekaer kettles sold in 330 mL, 380 mL, 400 mL, and 500 mL sizes. The CPSC warning says the front of the kettle carries the Sekaer logo, and packaging may show model numbers such as SY-618, SKE-833, SKE-840, and SKE-850. Sales channels listed by the agency include Amazon.com, Walmart.com, eBay.com, and Sears.com.
Three things to know now
- This is a stop-using warning, not a keep-using-it-carefully warning.
- The most practical first check is the front logo and the model number on the box, not memory of where it came from.
- If you think you have one, safety comes before refund or resale questions.
Three common situations
1. It is in luggage, a camping bin, or a storage shelf
Portable kettles are easy to forget because they are not always part of daily kitchen use. That makes today a good day to search travel gear before the next trip or summer move.
2. You remember the color, not the brand
That is common with low-cost personal appliances. Many portable kettles look similar, so checking the front logo and any remaining packaging is more reliable than going by shape alone.
3. It has worked fine for a long time
That does not make it safe. The CPSC warning is based on real reports of sudden bursts and severe burns, so “ours never had a problem before” is not a strong safety test.
Practical checklist
- Check whether you have a portable electric kettle in your room, office, travel kit, or storage box
- Look for the
Sekaerlogo on the front - If the box remains, look for
SY-618,SKE-833,SKE-840, orSKE-850 - If it appears to be covered by the warning, stop using it today
- Do not resell it, pass it on, or put it back into travel gear
- If hot water or steam has already burst out, keep photos and a short incident record
Easy to miss
This is not a “small appliance annoyance” story. Sudden hot liquid or steam can burn hands, wrists, thighs, or the face at close distance. The CPSC page is also a warning rather than a typical manufacturer-led recall page, which means the first consumer action is simply to stop using the product.
Official links
- CPSC warning: https://www.cpsc.gov/Warnings/2026/CPSC-Warns-Consumers-to-Stop-Using-Sekaer-Electric-Kettles-Immediately-Due-to-Risk-of-Serious-Injury-or-Death-from-Burn-Hazard
- CPSC recalls index: https://www.cpsc.gov/Recalls
- SaferProducts incident reporting: https://www.saferproducts.gov/
One-line takeaway
This Sekaer kettle warning is about finding a small appliance before it injures someone. If the logo and model details look familiar, stop using it first and sort out the rest after that.