What's current
Methodology
See where the data comes from, how often it updates, and what each concern level means.
Refreshed February 26, 2026.
FDA, CPSC, EPA, Consumer Reports, Independent labs, Bundled official lead-related recall snapshot
Used for the public catalog snapshot target.
The same catalog supports the pages you browse and the results you see in the app.
What's current
Current coverage: 49 public records across 10 categories. Last refreshed: February 26, 2026. Target refresh cadence: every 30 days.
The public pages and the app draw from the same underlying catalog, so category pages, brand pages, and in-app checks stay aligned without publishing every low-signal database row as a landing page.
Sources
The catalog combines product records, public recall and enforcement sources, and curated product-level notes. Current primary sources: FDA, CPSC, EPA, Consumer Reports, Independent labs, Bundled official lead-related recall snapshot.
Trust tier 1. Expected refresh cadence: every 24 hours.
Source homepageTrust tier 1. Expected refresh cadence: every 24 hours.
Source homepageTrust tier 2. Expected refresh cadence: every 168 hours.
Source homepageTrust tier 2. Expected refresh cadence: every 168 hours.
Source homepageTrust tier 1. Expected refresh cadence: every 168 hours.
Source homepageMatching starts with barcodes when possible, then falls back to OCR label text, manual search, aliases, and related product signals. Public pages group those results by brand and category so you can review the same evidence without scanning first.
Not every database row becomes a public page. Public pages stay focused on lead-relevant household products, child-facing items, food-contact products, retailer-matched store brands, and clearer consumer search paths over generic industrial, vehicle, or medical-device recall rows.
Concern labels are informational. They summarize the available evidence, recall context, and any recorded lead levels. They are not medical advice or a replacement for certified laboratory testing.
If an item has an active recall or a strong lead-related warning, stop using it and verify the next steps with the authoritative source linked on the relevant alert or product page.
Related
These pages all sit on top of the same public catalog view, just shaped for different questions.