Current legal status: There is currently no public recall or settlement involving Dawolrp fire pits. Consumers may still be able to seek legal review if they suffered serious burns or other losses involving a Dawolrp tabletop fire pit or another alcohol-burning tabletop fire pit.
Dawolrp tabletop fire pits are portable indoor/outdoor fire features used for decorative flames, tabletop ambiance, and gathering spaces. Some Dawolrp products are sold as metal tabletop fire pits powered by ethanol gel or similar fuel, while Dawolrp also sells campfire and marshmallow-roasting accessories.
The unique concern with a small metal tabletop fire pit is that it may feel like a controlled centerpiece while still involving open flame, liquid or gel fuel, hot metal, glass or shield components, and close seating. A user may focus on the flame display rather than fuel-vapor behavior, cooling time, surface heat, or the risk of moving or refueling the product too soon.
Quick Facts
- Dawolrp fire pit products include portable tabletop fire pits and fire-pit accessories used for outdoor entertaining, campfire-style use, and marshmallow roasting.
- Some Dawolrp tabletop fire pits are sold as indoor/outdoor metal tabletop fire pits powered by ethanol gel or similar fuel.
- CPSC has warned that alcohol or liquid-burning fire pits have been associated with two deaths and at least 60 injuries since 2019.
- Potential claims may involve burner design, fuel type, hot metal surfaces, glass or shield components, refueling instructions, warnings, seller records, and injury documentation.
Table Of Contents
- Latest News & Updates on Dawolrp Fire Pit Lawsuits
- What Is a Dawolrp Fire Pit?
- Reported Risks or Injuries
- How Does the Problem Occur, and Who May Be Liable?
- Who May Be Affected?
- Do I Qualify?
- Do I Have a Dawolrp Fire Pit Lawsuit?
- Important Legal Actions or Recalls
- Potential Compensation
- Legal Process Overview
- Frequently Asked Questions About Dawolrp Fire Pit Lawsuits
- Is there a Dawolrp fire pit recall?
- What are Dawolrp fire pits used for?
- What makes Dawolrp fire pit cases different from other fire pit cases?
- Why are alcohol-fueled tabletop fire pits dangerous?
- What injuries may support a Dawolrp fire pit lawsuit?
- Can I bring a claim if the fire pit was bought from an overseas marketplace?
- What evidence should I save after a Dawolrp fire pit accident?
- Do I need proof that the Dawolrp fire pit was recalled?
- References
Latest News & Updates on Dawolrp Fire Pit Lawsuits
June 2026
June 30, 2026 – In Oceanside, California, two children and one adult suffered burns while roasting marshmallows with a recalled tabletop fireplace fueled by rubbing alcohol. The incident was not reported as involving Dawolrp, but it illustrates how tabletop flame products can create severe burn risks when children, food activity, fuel, and close seating are part of the same setting [1].
May 2026
May 7, 2026 – CPSC warned consumers to stop using Northlight Bio Ethanol Portable Tabletop Fireplaces because they can create uncontrolled pool fires and flame jetting from fuel containers, resulting in serious or fatal burns. The warning is not specific to Dawolrp, but it reflects continuing regulatory concern about portable tabletop fireplaces that rely on pooled liquid fuel [2].
April 2026
April 2, 2026 – CPSC warned consumers to stop using Rozato Tabletop Fire Pits immediately after one death and multiple serious burn injuries were associated with flame-jetting and fire hazards. The agency stated that alcohol-fueled tabletop fire pits can create uncontrolled pool fires and flame jetting when liquid fuel burns across a surface or ignites during refueling [3].
December 2024
December 19, 2024 – CPSC issued a broad consumer alert warning against alcohol or other liquid-burning fire pits that require consumers to pour fuel into an open container or bowl and ignite the pooled liquid in the same place. CPSC stated that these products can violate ASTM F3363-19 and can create flame-jetting and uncontrolled pool-fire hazards [4].
October 2024
October 17, 2024 – CPSC recalled about 89,500 Colsen-branded fire pits after 31 reports of flame jetting or flames escaping from the concrete container. The recall reported 19 burn injuries, including third-degree burns, surgery, prolonged medical treatment, burn-center admission, disability, loss of function, or permanent disfigurement in some cases [5].
What Is a Dawolrp Fire Pit?
A Dawolrp fire pit is a portable tabletop flame product used for indoor/outdoor ambiance, small-space fire display, and gathering areas. Dawolrp tabletop fire pits may use ethanol gel or similar fuel instead of wood, charcoal, or propane.
Dawolrp also sells campfire and marshmallow-roasting accessories, including long metal roasting sticks. That accessory context can matter if a fire pit injury happened during s’mores, hot dogs, camping, patio dining, or a backyard activity where people were leaning toward the flame.
A metal tabletop fire pit presents different evidence issues than a concrete bowl. Investigators may need to evaluate hot metal surfaces, burner placement, shield components, fuel cup access, flame height, portability, and how the product was handled before or after the incident.
Consumers should preserve the fire pit, burner container, fuel canister or bottle, glass or shield pieces, roasting accessories, packaging, instructions, online order page, seller information, photos, videos, and witness statements. These details can help identify the exact product and reconstruct how the fuel and flame behaved.
Reported Risks or Injuries
The main risks involving alcohol-burning tabletop fire pits are flame jetting, flash fire, spillover, and pool fires. These hazards can move fire outside the intended burner area and expose users or bystanders to burning fuel.
Flame jetting can occur when alcohol or other fuel is added while flame, heat, or ignitable vapor remains inside the burner. A person may believe the product is ready for more fuel because the visible flame looks low, but the burner may still be hot enough to ignite incoming fuel.
Pool fires occur when burning fuel spreads across a tabletop, tray, counter, patio surface, or floor. If the product uses a portable metal frame or shield, the incident may also involve hot surfaces, tipped components, cracked glass, or attempts to move the device while it is still hot.
Potential injuries include second-degree burns, third-degree burns, facial burns, hand and arm burns, leg burns, airway injuries, smoke inhalation, infection, nerve damage, scarring, contractures, and permanent disfigurement. Severe cases may require emergency transport, hospitalization, burn-unit treatment, debridement, skin grafting, surgery, therapy, or long-term scar care.
How Does the Problem Occur, and Who May Be Liable?
The problem may begin when a user refuels, relights, moves, or handles the fire pit before the burner and surrounding metal parts have cooled. A product that looks small enough to reposition by hand may still contain dangerous heat, fuel vapor, or invisible flame.
Dawolrp cases may also involve a mismatch between “portable” use and real-world surfaces. A tabletop fire pit may be placed on a plastic table, wood table, patio mat, picnic bench, serving tray, balcony ledge, or crowded outdoor dining surface where spilled fuel can spread quickly.
A legal investigation may examine the burner design, fuel type, metal housing, glass or shield components, cooling instructions, fuel-fill guidance, warning placement, stability, packaging, product images, and online marketing. It may also evaluate whether users were clearly warned not to move, refill, or handle the product until it was fully extinguished and cool.
Potentially responsible parties may include the manufacturer, importer, online seller, marketplace, distributor, component supplier, fuel supplier, or other companies involved in selling or promoting the product. Liability depends on product identity, defect evidence, warning adequacy, seller records, injury mechanism, and state law.
Who May Be Affected?
Consumers may be affected if they were burned while lighting, refueling, relighting, moving, extinguishing, cleaning, roasting food, or sitting near a Dawolrp tabletop fire pit. The injured person does not have to be the person who poured the fuel.
Guests may also be affected if the fire pit was used at a party, campsite, patio meal, balcony gathering, or backyard event. A bystander may be burned by flame jetting, a spreading pool fire, hot metal, or burning fuel that traveled across the surface.
Children may face additional risk when a fire pit is used with marshmallow or hot dog roasting accessories. Long sticks may make the activity seem safer, but children may still lean toward the flame, move suddenly, or sit close to the tabletop burner.
Families may be affected when burn injuries require emergency care, hospitalization, skin grafting, missed work, or long-term scar treatment. Fatal burn incidents may also raise wrongful death issues depending on state law.
Do I Qualify?
- Were you burned by a Dawolrp tabletop fire pit, indoor/outdoor metal fire pit, ethanol-gel fire pit, or similar portable flame product?
- Did the product use ethanol gel, rubbing alcohol, isopropyl alcohol, bioethanol, or another liquid or gel fuel?
- Did the incident involve refueling, relighting, moving the fire pit, hot metal, glass or shield parts, spilled fuel, or food roasting?
- Did flames flare, jet outward, spill, spread across a surface, or flash back toward a fuel container?
- Were you lighting, refueling, extinguishing, moving, cleaning, roasting marshmallows or hot dogs, or sitting near the fire pit when the injury occurred?
- Did you suffer second-degree burns, third-degree burns, facial burns, hand burns, scarring, infection, surgery, skin grafting, or burn-unit treatment?
- Do you still have the fire pit, fuel container, roasting accessories, instructions, packaging, online listing, order records, medical records, or witness information?
Because Dawolrp products may be purchased through online marketplaces or overseas retail platforms, seller identification can be important. Save screenshots of the product page, order confirmation, shipping label, payment record, seller profile, product photos, and packaging.
Do I Have a Dawolrp Fire Pit Lawsuit?
If you or a loved one was injured by a Dawolrp fire pit, you may have legal options. Contact Schmidt & Clark for a free case review.
Important Legal Actions or Recalls
| Event | Month/Year | Type | Status | Notes | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dawolrp fire pit legal status | Current | Legal status | No public recall or settlement | Consumers may still seek legal review for serious burn injuries involving Dawolrp fire pits | CPSC Recall Database |
| CPSC liquid-burning fire pit warning | December 2024 | Consumer safety warning | Active warning | CPSC warned against alcohol or liquid-burning fire pits that require fuel to be poured into an open container and ignited in the same location | CPSC |
| Colsen tabletop fire pit recall | October 2024 | Consumer product recall | Recall announced | CPSC reported 31 incidents and 19 burn injuries involving Colsen-branded tabletop fire pits | CPSC |
| Rozato tabletop fire pit warning | April 2026 | Consumer safety warning | Stop-use warning | CPSC warned of flame-jetting and pool-fire hazards after one death and multiple serious burn injuries were associated with Rozato tabletop fire pits | CPSC |
| Northlight bioethanol tabletop fireplace warning | May 2026 | Consumer safety warning | Stop-use warning | CPSC warned of serious or fatal burn risks from flame jetting and uncontrolled pool fires | CPSC |
Potential Compensation
Potential compensation in a Dawolrp fire pit claim may include emergency care, ambulance transport, hospitalization, burn-unit treatment, wound care, debridement, surgery, skin grafting, prescriptions, scar treatment, physical therapy, and future medical care.
Additional damages may include pain and suffering, permanent scarring, disfigurement, emotional distress, lost wages, reduced earning capacity, home-care needs, travel costs, property damage, and loss of enjoyment of life. In fatal cases, surviving family members may be able to pursue wrongful death damages depending on state law.
Compensation amounts vary by case. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes.
Legal Process Overview
Step 1: Free case review. The review begins with the product name, seller, purchase platform, fuel type, incident sequence, injury severity, and available evidence. For Dawolrp cases, early questions may focus on whether the incident involved ethanol gel, hot metal, moving the unit, food roasting, flame jetting, or spilled fuel.
Step 2: Evidence preservation and investigation. The fire pit, burner container, metal frame, glass or shield components, fuel container, roasting accessories, packaging, instructions, online listing, burned clothing, photos, videos, medical records, and witness statements should be preserved where possible. Product experts may evaluate burner containment, heat transfer, stability, fuel compatibility, warnings, and foreseeable portable tabletop use.
Step 3: Filing the claim. If the evidence supports legal action, a claim may allege defective design, failure to warn, negligence, breach of warranty, marketplace liability, or other claims depending on state law. Filing deadlines vary by state.
Step 4: Discovery and negotiation. Discovery may involve seller records, marketplace documents, product testing, warning materials, import records, incident reports, medical records, expert opinions, and witness testimony. Negotiation may focus on burn severity, scarring, future care, lost income, product identification, and responsibility among sellers, suppliers, and manufacturers.
Step 5: Resolution. A case may resolve through settlement, dismissal, court ruling, or trial. The outcome depends on product proof, defect evidence, injury documentation, expert analysis, damages, and legal defenses.
Frequently Asked Questions About Dawolrp Fire Pit Lawsuits
Is there a Dawolrp fire pit recall?
There is currently no public recall involving Dawolrp fire pits. Consumers may still be able to request legal review if they suffered serious burn injuries or other losses involving a Dawolrp fire pit.
What are Dawolrp fire pits used for?
Dawolrp fire pits are portable tabletop flame products used for indoor/outdoor ambiance, gatherings, decorative fire display, and campfire-style settings. Some Dawolrp products use ethanol gel or similar fuel.
What makes Dawolrp fire pit cases different from other fire pit cases?
Dawolrp cases may involve metal tabletop fire pit construction, ethanol-gel fuel, glass or shield components, portable setup, and food-roasting accessories. Those facts can make hot-surface evidence, fuel-container evidence, seller records, and accessory evidence especially important.
Why are alcohol-fueled tabletop fire pits dangerous?
Alcohol flames can be hard to see, and liquid or gel fuel can ignite unexpectedly if the burner remains hot. Refueling or moving the product too soon can expose users and bystanders to flame jetting, spilled burning fuel, or hot metal surfaces.
What injuries may support a Dawolrp fire pit lawsuit?
Potential claims may involve second-degree burns, third-degree burns, facial burns, hand and arm burns, infection, skin grafting, burn-unit treatment, permanent scarring, disfigurement, or death. Medical records and injury photos are important evidence.
Can I bring a claim if the fire pit was bought from an overseas marketplace?
Possibly. Claims may still be reviewed if the injured person can identify the product, seller, purchase platform, payment record, shipping information, and product packaging. Screenshots and order records can be especially important.
What evidence should I save after a Dawolrp fire pit accident?
Save the fire pit, burner container, fuel container, roasting accessories, instructions, packaging, online listing, photos, videos, burned clothing, medical records, fire reports, and witness statements. If the product is unsafe to keep, photograph it thoroughly before disposal.
Do I need proof that the Dawolrp fire pit was recalled?
No. A product does not have to be recalled for an injured consumer to request a legal review. Many product liability claims focus on design, warnings, foreseeable use, seller records, fuel instructions, and injury evidence.
References
- https://people.com/children-airlifted-to-burn-center-after-roasting-marshmallows-tabletop-fireplace-12009376
- https://www.cpsc.gov/Warnings/2026/CPSC-Warns-Consumers-to-Stop-Using-Northlight-Bio-Ethanol-Portable-Tabletop-Fireplaces-Immediately-Due-to-Risk-of-Serious-Burn-Injury-or-Death-from-Flame-Jetting-and-Fire-Hazards
- https://www.cpsc.gov/Warnings/2026/CPSC-Warns-Consumers-to-Stop-Using-Rozato-Tabletop-Fire-Pits-Immediately-Due-to-Flame-Jetting-and-Fire-Hazards-One-Death-and-Serious-Burn-Injuries-Reported
- https://www.cpsc.gov/Warnings/2025/Consumer-Alert-Stop-Using-Alcohol-or-Other-Liquid-Burning-Fire-Pits-That-Violate-Voluntary-Standards-and-Present-Flame-Jetting-and-Fire-Hazards-Two-Deaths-and-Dozens-of-Serious-Burn-Injuries-Reported
- https://www.cpsc.gov/Recalls/2025/Colsen-Recalls-Fire-Pits-Due-to-Risk-of-Serious-Burn-Injury-from-Flame-Jetting-and-Fire-Spreading-Hazards
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