The Recall Desk
SevereCPSC·26002·Announced 2025-10-02

Zyntony Power Banks Recalled for Battery Fire and Burn Hazards

Zyntony's Kogalla power banks (BP125, BatPak 2F, BatPak 3F) are recalled because their lithium-ion batteries can overheat and ignite, even when not in use. Two incidents have resulted in one minor burn injury and property damage.

What this means for you

Illness, injury, or structural failure has been reported. Stop using the product immediately and contact the manufacturer for a refund or repair.

Our severity reasoning: This recall meets the Severe standard because it involves reported fire incidents with documented injury and property damage. Two confirmed incidents of battery overheating and igniting resulted in one burn injury and approximately $3,300 in property damage, indicating significant injury and property-damage reports.

Plain-English summary

Zyntony Inc. is recalling approximately 2,400 Kogalla-branded power banks, models BP125, BatPak 2F, and BatPak 3F. The recalled power banks have lithium-ion batteries with capacities of 6,700mAh, 13,400mAh, or 20,100mAh. These batteries can overheat and ignite, even when the power banks are not in use, posing fire and burn hazards.

Zyntony has received two reports of the batteries overheating and catching fire while not in use. These incidents resulted in one minor burn injury and property damage totaling about $3,300.

The power banks were sold separately and included with Kogalla trail lights on Kogalla.com. The BP125 and BatPak 2F models were sold from June 2024 through January 2025. The BatPak 3F was sold from August 2024 through January 2025. Power banks were priced between $45 and $90, and trail light kits with power banks were priced between $180 and $230.

Consumers should immediately stop using the recalled power banks. Kogalla is offering free replacement power banks, including shipping. Consumers can request a replacement by filling out a form at https://rtn.kogalla.com/products/request-batpak-replacement or contacting Kogalla at [email protected]. Recalled power banks must be disposed of at a municipal household hazardous waste collection center and should not be thrown in regular trash or recycling.

The recalled product

Product
BP125, BatPak 2F and BatPak 3F Power Banks
Manufacturer
Zyntony Inc. of Draper, Utah
Hazard
  • fire
  • burn-injury
Affected units
2,400

Distribution

Distributed nationwide across the United States.