Costco Patio Furniture Recalled After 8 Injury Reports Linked to Agio Swing Collapse

Costco Patio Furniture Recalled After 8 Injury Reports Linked to Agio Swing Collapse

Costco patio furniture buyers are facing a new safety warning after a swing sold earlier this year was recalled following eight injury reports tied to seats detaching from the frame.

The recall covers the Agio Menlo Woven Patio Swing, sold exclusively through Costco stores and Costco.com from February 2026 through March 2026. About 18,500 units are affected, according to the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission.

The concern is not cosmetic or minor. Regulators said the swing seat can separate from the frame while someone is sitting on it, creating a fall hazard that may lead to serious injury or death. World Bright International Limited, the company behind the product, has received eight reports of the swing seat detaching. All eight reports involved injuries, including impacts to the head and arms.

The recalled swing can be identified by model number 1934256. It has a black metal frame, black metal swing arms, a brown padded wicker seat and a fabric canopy. The product was sold for about $549 to $649 during the two-month sales period.

Customers who bought the swing are being told not to continue using it until the repair is completed. Costco sent recall notices to members on May 14, the same day the federal recall was posted. The remedy is a free repair kit from World Bright International, including replacement hooks and installation instructions.

The official recall notice is available through the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, which advises owners to stop using the recalled swing until the replacement parts are installed.

Why this Costco recall matters

Patio swings carry more risk than standard outdoor chairs because they depend on suspended hardware, hooks and frame connections to support moving weight. If one of those connection points fails, a person may fall suddenly with little time to react. That risk is higher when the product is used by children, older adults or more than one person at a time.

The timing also makes the recall important for shoppers. The swing was sold shortly before the spring and summer outdoor season, when many families begin using backyard furniture more often. Anyone who purchased a Costco patio swing this year should check the model number before using it again.

The recall also shows why consumers should not ignore retailer notices. Costco’s member-based sales system can help the company contact affected buyers directly, but shoppers who moved, changed email addresses or bought the item for someone else may still miss the warning.

Owners should inspect the product label, confirm whether the model number is 1934256, and contact World Bright International or Agio Living recall support for the free repair kit. The company is not asking customers to return the entire swing before receiving the replacement hardware.

For readers tracking similar retailer safety alerts, Swikblog recently covered another Costco-related recall involving 32 Degrees heated socks recalled over burn injury risk.

Consumers should keep the swing away from use until the new hooks are installed, even if the furniture appears stable. A product can look secure while still having a hardware issue that only becomes visible under weight or movement.

The recall is voluntary, but the injury reports make the warning serious. For Costco customers who bought the Agio Menlo Woven Patio Swing between February and March 2026, the safest move is to verify the model, stop using the swing and request the repair kit before anyone sits on it again.

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