CPSC-first recall monitoring

Stop selling recalled products before someone gets hurt.

Catalog Recall Monitor scans redacted product rows for resale, recommerce, and safety-sensitive ecommerce teams, then returns a source-backed queue: suppress recommendation, manual review, or no visible match.

9,811+ CPSC recall records scanned by default
1973-06-08 - 2026-05-14 Full historical window. Old recalls still matter for resale.
How it works

Three states. Source links attached.

full historical CPSC recall cache (9,811 records, 1973-06-08 to 2026-05-14). Real buyer scans use this full history by default.

01

Send redacted rows.

Send product-level catalog rows only: title, brand, category, SKU, model, UPC, or listing URL when available. No customer or order data.

02

We scan 9,742+ CPSC records.

The file is checked against the full historical CPSC recall cache, because a recalled 2019 product can still be illegal to resell today.

03

You get the queue.

Rows come back as suppress recommendation, manual review, or no visible match, with official CPSC links and plain-English reasons.

Who it is for

Built for messy product intake.

Built for teams handling:

Children's resale Baby gear Consignment chains Estate sales Liquidation and overstock Safety-sensitive ecommerce Consultants serving recommerce operators

Not a generic compliance dashboard.

This is for operators with product rows that need a repeatable first-pass recall screen before listing, relisting, resale intake, or client reporting.

What you get

A report your ops team can inspect.

First page preview of a Catalog Recall Monitor sample report

The output is a queue, not a black-box score.

Every possible match includes the catalog row, official recall source, evidence class, reason, and recommended next action.

Suppress recommendationHard UPC/model evidence
Manual reviewPlausible but not conclusive
No visible matchNothing visible in scanned official sources
Boundary

Conservative by design.

What the report can say.

"No visible match found in scanned official sources as of the scan time."

That is the correct claim. It keeps the work factual, source-backed, and reviewable.

What it will not say.

It does not certify products as safe, provide legal advice, replace human safety review, or automatically remove listings without operator approval.

Concierge pilot: $250-500 setup OR $199/month monitoring. Messy exports are reviewed and confirmed before anything paid.

Concierge pilot, not a black box.

Catalog Recall Monitor is built for operators who need clean evidence before risky products move through a catalog.