A small appliance-part recall is worth a big kitchen-safety pause for Canadian shoppers this week. Health Canada posted a July 7, 2026 recall for the Sunluway Oven Bottom Panel Replacement, warning that the product can create a burn hazard during use. The recall is narrow: the company reported 10 affected units sold in Canada, and the affected products were sold from November 2025 to April 2026. But the lesson is broader for anyone buying low-cost replacement parts, oven liners or repair accessories through an online marketplace. Parts that look simple can still sit inside a high-heat appliance, and that makes the brand name, model information and seller trail important parts of the purchase.

The recalled item is identified as the Sunluway Oven Bottom Panel Replacement. Health Canada says shoppers can find the brand name “Sunluway” and the ASIN B0FQ5MFBTC on the Amazon.ca product listing and in order details. The reported problem is with the protective coating: during operation, Health Canada says the coating may rapidly decompose and scorch, with severe paint cracking, large-scale peeling or delamination, and dense smoke generation inside the appliance. As of June 30, 2026, the company had received no reports of incidents or injuries in Canada. That is reassuring, but it is not a reason to keep using the part once it has been recalled.

If you bought an oven bottom panel replacement online in the past year, start with your order history rather than your memory. Search Amazon.ca orders for “Sunluway,” “oven bottom panel,” and the ASIN B0FQ5MFBTC. If the recalled product appears, Health Canada’s instruction is clear: immediately stop using it and dispose of it. Do not test it one more time to see whether it smokes, and do not move it to a cottage, rental suite or garage oven. A recalled part may be inconvenient to replace, but a smoky oven incident is worse, especially in a summer kitchen where windows may be closed for air conditioning or wildfire smoke.

The refund path also matters. Health Canada says consumers can contact Sunluway Bearings USA through Amazon’s Buyer-Seller Messaging Service by choosing “Contact Seller” in order details, which the recall notice describes as the fastest route for resolution and refund processing. The notice also lists a compliance support email for alternative inquiries. Keep screenshots of your order, the ASIN, the recall notice and any messages with the seller until the refund is complete. If you share a household account, ask other family members to check their own order history too; marketplace purchases can be easy to forget when the item is a repair part rather than a finished appliance.

This recall is also a reminder not to resell recalled goods. The notice points to the Canada Consumer Product Safety Act rule that recalled products must not be redistributed, sold or even given away in Canada. That means no Facebook Marketplace listing, no curbside free box and no “handy person can use this” post. Disposal can feel wasteful, but passing along a recalled high-heat component transfers the risk to someone who may never see the safety notice. If you run a small property business, short-term rental or community kitchen, add recalled appliance parts to the same checklist you use for smoke alarms, carbon monoxide alarms and fire extinguishers.

For future purchases, treat replacement parts differently from ordinary kitchen gadgets. Before ordering, match the part to the appliance model, read recent reviews for smoke, smell, peeling or fit complaints, and save the seller name and ASIN with your receipt. Be cautious with universal-fit parts used in high-heat areas, because the lowest price is not the only value question. If a listing is vague about material, temperature rating or compatible models, compare it with the appliance manufacturer’s recommended part. Canadian shoppers do not need to avoid online marketplace parts entirely, but they should assume that a part installed inside an oven deserves more scrutiny than a drawer organizer or silicone spatula.

Finally, report problems if you saw smoke, scorching, unusual odour, peeling coating or another safety issue with this product or any consumer product. Health Canada links shoppers to its Consumer Product Incident Report Form and also posts recalls through the national recalls and safety alerts system. Reports are useful even when there is no injury, because they help regulators and companies spot patterns earlier. Today’s Sunluway recall involves only a small reported sales number in Canada, but it gives shoppers a practical July habit: check order histories for recalled items, stop using affected products promptly, keep refund records, and never pass recalled goods to another household.

Source trail: - Health Canada, “Sunluway Oven Bottom Panel Replacement recalled due to burn hazard” — https://recalls-rappels.canada.ca/en/alert-recall/sunluway-oven-bottom-panel-replacement-recalled-due-burn-hazard - Department of Justice Canada, “Canada Consumer Product Safety Act” — https://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/acts/C-1.68/ - Health Canada, “Report an incident involving a consumer product or cosmetic” — https://www.canada.ca/en/health-canada/services/consumer-product-safety/advisories-warnings-recalls/report-incident-involving-consumer-product.html - OECD Global Portal on Product Recalls — https://globalrecalls.oecd.org/