TK Maxx Recalls Popular Power Bank Over Fire Risk: What You Need to Know

TK Maxx Recalls Popular Power Bank Over Fire Risk: What You Need to Know

Your Bargain Charger Might Be a Fire Hazard

If you picked up an XO Poppy Super Power 10,000 mAh Power Bank from TK Maxx sometime between November 2025 and January 2026, you might want to put it down. Gently. And then take it back to the shop.

TK Maxx has issued an urgent recall on the portable charger after it was found to present a genuine fire risk. The official GOV.UK product safety notice (reference 2511-0117), published on 17 March 2026, pulls no punches: the product has poor internal build quality, with wires soldered directly to the PCB with no secondary form of fixing. In other words, the thing that is supposed to charge your phone might decide to set fire to your bag instead.

Which Models Are Affected?

The recall covers three pattern variants of the same power bank, all sold under the XO Poppy branding:

  • Bow print (model PY-UKPBK10M-BW8, product code 014851)
  • Leopard print (model PY-UKPBK10M-LP1, product code 014852)
  • Swan print (model PY-UKPBK10M-SW3, product code 014853)

So yes, regardless of whether you went for understated bows or bold leopard spots, all three are affected. The product was manufactured in China and has been found to fail the General Product Safety Regulation 2005.

What Should You Do?

The advice from both TK Maxx and the UK government is refreshingly straightforward:

Stop using the product immediately and return it to your nearest TK Maxx store for a full refund.

No receipt drama, no customer service phone maze. Just walk in, hand it over, and get your money back. If you have already binned the packaging, do not worry. The recall applies to anyone who purchased one during that November 2025 to January 2026 window.

A Pattern Worth Noticing

Here is the bit that should raise an eyebrow. This is not the first time TK Maxx has had to recall a portable charger in recent months. A Belkin Portable Power Bank (BPB002), sold by the retailer between July 2023 and April 2025, was also pulled from shelves over lithium-ion battery overheating concerns. An Anker Power Bank (589267) got the same treatment for failing to meet Electrical Equipment Safety Regulations.

Three power bank recalls from the same retailer in a relatively short period is not exactly a confidence-inspiring track record. It does not mean every portable charger on TK Maxx's shelves is dodgy, but it is a reminder that cheap tech bargains can sometimes come with hidden costs. Lithium-ion batteries are brilliant when they work properly, but when the manufacturing quality control is lacking, they can be genuinely dangerous.

The Bigger Lesson

Portable power banks have become one of those things most of us carry without a second thought. They sit in bags, pockets, and desk drawers, quietly topping up our devices. But the reality is that a poorly made lithium-ion battery is not something you want rattling around next to your keys and headphones.

If you are in the market for a replacement, it is worth spending a few extra quid on a charger from a brand with proper safety certifications. Look for products that comply with current UK electrical safety standards and have clear manufacturer contact details on the packaging. A tenner saved on a bargain charger is not much comfort if it melts through your rucksack.

Quick Recap

  • Product: XO Poppy Super Power 10,000 mAh Power Bank
  • Sold at: TK Maxx stores, November 2025 to January 2026
  • Risk: Fire, due to poor internal build quality
  • Action: Stop using immediately, return to any TK Maxx for a full refund
  • Recall reference: 2511-0117

Check your drawers, check your bags, and if you spot one of these, do not plug it in. Take it back.

Read the original article at source.

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Written by

Daniel Benson

Writer, editor, and the entire staff of SignalDaily. Spent years in tech before deciding the news needed fewer press releases and more straight talk. Covers AI, technology, sport and world events — always with context, sometimes with sarcasm. No ads, no paywalls, no patience for clickbait. Based in the UK.