Junpower CR2032 Coin Battery Recall
Junpower CR2032 Lithium Coin Batteries Recalled Due to Risk of Serious Injury or Death from Battery Ingestion Hazard; Violate Federal Statute for Child-Resistant Packaging of Coin Batteries; Sold on Amazon by JSNJ_Tech Store
Updated July 2, 2026
Junpower CR2032 lithium coin batteries are being recalled because they are sold in packaging that is not child-resistant and lack the required warning labels under Reese's Law. If a child swallows one of these batteries, it can cause severe internal chemical burns or death.
Is the Junpower CR2032 Batteries recalled? Yes. This product was recalled by CPSC on July 2, 2026. Details below.
What is recalled
Junpower CR2032 Batteries, 20-piece packs in Packaging model 2023-V3. The product comes in a white box labeled "JUNPOWER Household Batteries" containing four inner packs of five batteries each. Sold on Amazon through the JSNJ_Tech Store.
Am I affected
You are affected if you have a white box labeled "JUNPOWER Household Batteries" containing Junpower CR2032 batteries in Packaging model 2023-V3 (four inner packs of five batteries, 20 batteries total), purchased on Amazon from the JSNJ_Tech Store.
What to do right now
Stop using these batteries immediately and move them somewhere children absolutely cannot reach. Then visit Junpower's recall page at https://www.cognitoforms.com/Junpower2032/recall to register. You will be asked to write the date, your initials, and the word "Recalled" in permanent marker on the product, then submit a photo of the marked product. After completing those steps, dispose of the batteries following your local hazardous waste procedures and Junpower will send you a free replacement battery. You can also contact Junpower by email at [email protected] or at www.junpowerbattery.com (click "Recall" at the top of the page).
Contact: Junpower by email at [email protected] or online at https://www.cognitoforms.com/Junpower2032/recall or www.junpowerbattery.com and click "Recall" at the top of the page for more information.
The hazard
The lithium coin batteries are not sold in child-resistant packaging and do not bear the warning labels as required under Reese's Law. When button cell or coin batteries are swallowed, the ingested batteries can cause serious injuries, including internal chemical burns and death.



Brands affected
- Source
- CPSC
- Category
- Baby & Kids
- Recall ID
- cpsc-26600
- Recalled
- July 2, 2026
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