본문으로 이동
ONEPRESS

GLOBAL BRIEF

The recalled Amazon party kit is not just decor. Check button-battery access today

Global briefing

GLOBAL LANGUAGES

Briefings by language

Only translations that preserve official sources and action checks are linked.

A parent moving a bin of LED party favors onto a high shelf while checking an order history on a phone
A ONEPRESS global safety image based on the June 25, 2026 CPSC recall notice and the CPSC recalls index.
  • Checked: 2026-07-03 23:05 KST
  • Source set: CPSC recall notice dated June 25, 2026 and the CPSC Recalls & Product Safety Warnings index

CPSC says several light-up items in the Honlyne LED Party Favors kit can let children access the button-cell battery compartment. If swallowed, the battery can cause severe internal burns or death. The recall covers about 13,400 kits sold on Amazon from June 2024 through December 2025 for about $49 each.

The daily-life problem is that these items do not stay in one box. Hair clips, glasses, foam glow sticks, flower headbands, and finger lights can remain loose after a birthday or classroom event. The useful move today is not simply to find the packaging. It is to remove the scattered light-up pieces from places children can reach.

Who should check now

  • Homes that bought glow party kits or kids event bundles on Amazon within the last year
  • Families storing leftover LED party items after birthdays, school events, or playroom activities
  • Anyone who threw away the box but still has loose light-up items in drawers, cars, or favor bags

What to change today

  1. Search Amazon orders for Honlyne, Glow in the Dark Party Supplies, and HON-302HE.
  2. Separate the items first instead of testing whether they still light up.
  3. If refund photos are required, do not reactivate the product in front of children.
  4. Dispose of the batteries and product according to local household hazardous-waste guidance.

User checklist

  • Did you recheck order history or payment emails for the brand and model name
  • Did you look beyond the party-supplies box and also check drawers, cars, and favor bags
  • Did you move the light-up pieces away from children first
  • Did you decide not to power the items on again just to verify them
  • Did you confirm the disposal rule for button batteries in your area

Official links

Bottom line: The point to check today is not the party look. It is whether a child can reach a button battery.