
A backyard swing, sold by a brand families trust at a store millions rely on, was recalled because the seat could suddenly drop you on your back with enough force that federal regulators warned of “serious injury or death.”[3]
Story Snapshot
- More than 18,000 Agio Menlo Woven Patio Swings sold only at Costco were recalled after seat detachments and eight reported injuries.[1][3]
- The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission said the seat can detach from the frame during normal use, creating a dangerous fall hazard.[1][3]
- Every known detachment event produced an injury, including blows to the head and arms, according to recall reports.[1][3]
- Consumers are told to stop using the swing immediately and rely on a repair kit with new hooks, even though the public has not seen the underlying engineering analysis.[1][3]
When a Relaxing Swing Turns Into a Drop Zone
The Agio Menlo Woven Patio Swing was marketed as the kind of “set it and forget it” backyard upgrade that visually screams summer: a black metal frame, a fabric canopy, a cushioned brown wicker-style seat, and a Costco price tag between $549 and $649.[1][3]
According to the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, that pleasant picture ended the moment the seat began to separate from the frame while people were sitting on it, turning a lazy sway into an unexpected backward fall.[1]
Federal regulators reported more than 18,000 of these swings in homes across the country, all tied to the same basic risk: the swing seat can detach from the supporting frame during use.[1][3]
World Bright International Limited, which produces Agio outdoor furniture, acknowledged eight incidents where that detachment actually happened, and all eight ended with injuries, including impact injuries to the head and arms.[1][3]
This is not a hypothetical “may cause discomfort” warning; it is fall-to-the-ground, body-meets-concrete reality.
What the Recall Really Says About Risk and Responsibility
The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission recall language does not dance around the danger. It states that the defect poses a risk of serious injury or death from a fall hazard, a standard that is not invoked lightly.[3]
World Bright, in cooperation with the agency, urged consumers to stop using the swing immediately and to contact the company for a free repair kit that includes four replacement hooks and instructions.[1][3]
That combination of urgent stop-use language plus a hardware replacement remedy signals a specific mechanical failure path, even if the details remain out of public view.
A popular patio swing sold at Costco is being recalled after multiple people have been injured when the swing seat reportedly detached during use, according to the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission. https://t.co/hCbsuoqfgO
— ABC News (@ABC) May 24, 2026
From this perspective, the tension shows. On one hand, personal responsibility matters: people choose to buy, assemble, and use products. On the other hand, when a swing sold by a trusted big-box retailer fails under normal, foreseeable use and sends customers to the ground, government oversight has a legitimate role.[1][3]
The recall puts a clear marker down: the original hook system was not reliably keeping the seat attached under real-world loading, whatever the exact engineering flaw might be.
The Missing Engineering Story Behind the Headlines
Public reporting does not spell out whether this was a design flaw, a manufacturing defect, a bad batch of components, or a problem with consumer assembly.[1][3][4]
The recall notice identifies the symptom—the seat detaching from the frame—and the consequence—a fall hazard—but not the root cause.
News segments and articles understandably highlight the eight injuries, the recall date of May 14, 2026, and the Costco exclusivity, but consumers are left without the mechanical “why” that would separate a one-off parts issue from a fundamental design failure.[1][3][4]
A @Costco-exclusive patio swing is being recalled after @USCPSC says the seat can detach from the frame while in use, posing a risk of serious injury or death.
The recall covers about 18,500 Agio Menlo Woven Patio Swings sold nationwide and online from February to March 2026.…
— Erik Hoffmann (@TheErikHoffmann) May 22, 2026
That information gap matters for anyone who values transparency over theater. The company and the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission have incident files, photographs, and likely stress analyses showing what failed and under what loads.
Yet, the public gets a compressed story: eight incidents out of roughly 18,500 units sold, all injurious, therefore recall and repair.[1][3]
Without seeing failure rates over time or any testing on the new hooks, shoppers must trust that the same system that missed the original issue has now adequately fixed it.
How Consumers Should Read Recalls Like This One
Consumers over forty have lived through enough recall cycles to know the pattern: a popular product, a terse agency notice, and a scramble to find the model number stamped in tiny print on a label.[1][3]
For the Agio Menlo Woven Patio Swing, that model number is 1934256, and the affected units were sold at Costco warehouses and on Costco.com in a very tight window from February 1 to March 20, 2026.[1][3]
Anyone who bought a large, canopy-topped swing in that period should check their receipt and the label, not their memory.
Relying on repair kits is not unreasonable if the core design is sound and a specific hardware component underperformed, but that conclusion rests on evidence that has not been shared publicly.[1][3]
This situation suggests a practical approach: take the recall seriously, stop using the swing until it is repaired, and then decide whether you trust the fix enough to put your grandchildren, your guests, or your own back on it.
The recall notice makes one thing unambiguous: this patio swing, as originally sold, failed the basic test of remaining safely intact.[1][3]
Sources:
[1] Web – Costco patio swings recalled after reports of injuries from falls
[3] YouTube – Patio swings sold at Costco recalled
[4] YouTube – Patio swings sold at Costco recalled