The Scale of the Canadian Footprint
Recalls vary widely in how many households they actually touch. This one sits at the high end of the homeowner-relevant scale this month. Zwilling reported to Health Canada that 43,963 units of the affected kettles were sold in Canada and 113,590 units in the United States, with the products manufactured in China by Zhongshan AnBoEr Electrical Appliance Co., Ltd. and imported into Canada by Zwilling JA Henckels Canada Ltd. of Markham, Ontario.
Incident data is consistent across both regulators. As of May 13, 2026, the company reported 21 incident reports in Canada and one report of a potential injury, alongside 96 incidents and one potential injury in the United States. The CPSC's parallel disclosure is more granular: 163 total reports of the handle separating or loosening, five incidents specifically involving handle detachment, and one confirmed second-degree burn.
The injury count is low relative to the unit count, but it is not zero — and the failure rate that produced 163 cumulative reports across the fleet is what regulators are using to justify a full stop-use directive. A second-degree burn from a 1.5-litre kettle full of boiling water is a meaningful event. The right read is not "twenty-one out of forty-four thousand," but "the defect has already crossed the threshold from theoretical to documented."
Why Premium Distribution Channels Matter Here
Zwilling itself lists the U.S. retail channels for the Enfinigy line as Amazon.com, Bloomingdale's, Crate & Barrel, Williams-Sonoma, and HomeGoods' parent company. The Canadian channel mix is similar: Williams-Sonoma Canada, Hudson's Bay, and Amazon.ca dominate, with seasonal sale pricing landing the Pro model in the C$135–C$240 range depending on the retailer and timing. That distribution profile concentrates ownership in households that bought through retailer-of-record channels — the same channels that will be best positioned to process refunds and return shipping documentation if needed for the recall registration.
It is also worth noting that the kettles are not the only Zwilling product in active Canadian kitchens. Owners checking the Enfinigy should not assume other Zwilling small appliances are affected — the recall is specifically scoped to the 1.5-litre Enfinigy and Enfinigy Pro electric kettles, not to coffee makers, toasters, or other capacity sizes in the same product line.