Two new consumer-product recalls are worth a quick household check before the weekend, especially if you recently bought a portable vaporizer or baby stroller accessory. Health Canada’s recalls portal posted June 18 notices for the Arizer Solo III Intergalactic (Black) Portable Vaporizer and the Joolz Aer2 Car Seat Adapter Set. They are very different products, but the shopper lesson is the same: match the exact product identifiers, stop using a matching item, and follow the official remedy instead of trying a home fix. Neither notice is a reason to panic or toss unrelated products. It is a prompt to look at the label, serial number or product identifier before the item gets used again.

The Arizer notice covers the Solo III Intergalactic (Black) Portable Vaporizer, a rechargeable battery-powered device with an internal lithium-ion battery. Health Canada says the internal lithium-ion batteries in the recalled vaporizers can overheat and ignite, posing fire and burn hazards. The affected packaging carries UPC 628078802274, and only units with serial numbers beginning with the listed prefixes are included: M3B1G5, M3F4G6, M35C43, M3PN54, M3SR42, M38G53, M3G576 and M3C121. The serial number is etched on the bottom of the device and printed on the packaging, so check both if you still have the box. If your unit does not match the model, colour, UPC and serial-prefix details, do not assume it is part of this recall.

The official action for a matching Arizer unit is clear: immediately stop using it and contact 7111495 Canada Inc. for a free replacement. Health Canada lists a phone number, 1-888-291-0521, an email address, recall@arizer.com, and the company website for more information. A useful budget takeaway is to avoid reselling, gifting or continuing to store a recalled lithium-ion product in regular household circulation. Health Canada also reminds consumers that the Canada Consumer Product Safety Act prohibits recalled products from being redistributed, sold or even given away in Canada. If the company provides disposal instructions, follow those instructions rather than placing a battery-powered device in a curbside bin. Lithium-ion products can require different handling because of fire risk.

The second notice affects the Joolz Aer2 Car Seat Adapter Set, a black plastic accessory used to connect an infant car seat to a Joolz Aer2 stroller chassis. Health Canada says only the adapter is involved; the stroller chassis itself is not being recalled. The recalled adapter measures about 9.0 inches wide, 6.9 inches tall and 1.2 inches thick, and a product identifier starting with NL311 is printed on the inside of the adapter. The issue is a fall hazard: the adapter may fail to properly attach to the Aer2 stroller chassis, which may allow the car seat to fall from the stroller. For parents and caregivers, this is exactly the kind of small accessory that can be missed if it is stored in a diaper bag, car trunk or closet between outings.

For the Joolz adapter, Health Canada tells consumers to stop using the product immediately and visit www.joolzcarseatadapter.expertinquiry.com to register for the recall and receive return instructions for a refund. The notice also lists Joolz partner Sedgwick at 1-888-943-4889, Monday to Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. ET. The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission’s matching recall notice describes the remedy as returning the adapter sets with a prepaid shipping label for a full refund, with reimbursement through an electronic payment method or virtual prepaid gift card. Canadian shoppers should still follow the Canadian recall page first, but the U.S. notice is helpful because this is a joint recall with Health Canada, the U.S. CPSC and Joolz USA Inc.

A practical recall check can take five minutes. First, search the exact product name in your order history, email receipts, marketplace account or baby registry. Second, inspect the product itself for the serial number, UPC or identifier listed in the notice. Third, take photos before contacting the company if the recall page or registration form asks for proof. Fourth, move the item away from regular use so another household member does not grab it by habit. For baby gear, also check secondary storage spots: grandparents’ homes, car trunks, daycare drop-off bags and travel strollers. For battery-powered devices, check drawers, bedside tables, backpacks and charging areas. The goal is not to create a long chore; it is to make sure the exact recalled item is not used while you are waiting for a replacement or refund.

These notices are also a reminder to be cautious with second-hand shopping. A recalled stroller adapter or rechargeable device can look normal in photos, and private sellers may not know a recall has been issued. Before buying used baby gear, electronics, small appliances or battery-powered products, search the model name on the Government of Canada recalls site and compare identifiers, not just brand names. If you already own one of the recalled products, do not sell it to recover the cost. Use the official process instead. For this June recall check, the key actions are simple: review Arizer Solo III Intergalactic black vaporizers for UPC 628078802274 and the listed serial prefixes; review Joolz Aer2 adapter sets for an NL311 identifier; stop using a match; and follow the company remedy through the recall links.

Source trail: - Government of Canada recalls and safety alerts: “Arizer Solo III Intergalactic (Black) Portable Vaporizers recalled due to fire and burn hazards” — https://recalls-rappels.canada.ca/en/alert-recall/arizer-solo-iii-intergalactic-black-portable-vaporizers-recalled-due-fire-and-burn - Government of Canada recalls and safety alerts: “Joolz Aer2 Car Seat Adapter Set recalled due to fall hazard” — https://recalls-rappels.canada.ca/en/alert-recall/joolz-aer2-car-seat-adapter-set-recalled-due-fall-hazard - Government of Canada: “Find recalls, advisories and safety alerts” — https://recalls-rappels.canada.ca/en - U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission: “Joolz Recalls Aer2 Car Seat Adapters for Strollers Due to Risk of Serious Injury from Fall Hazard” — https://www.cpsc.gov/Recalls/2026/Joolz-Recalls-Aer2-Car-Seat-Adapters-for-Strollers-Due-to-Risk-of-Serious-Injury-from-Fall-Hazard - U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission: “Arizer Solo III Portable Vaporizers Recalled Due to Fire and Burn Hazards; Risk of Serious Injury or Death; Imported by 7111495 Canada” — https://www.cpsc.gov/Recalls/2026/Arizer-Solo-III-Portable-Vaporizers-Recalled-Due-to-Fire-and-Burn-Hazards-Risk-of-Serious-Injury-or-Death-Imported-by-7111495-Canada