If a recalled Snooz noise machine overheated, smoked, or caused a fire in your home, a legal review may help you understand your options.
Compensation may be available for medical bills, property losses, relocation costs, and other documented damages tied to a defective fan or sound machine.
Table Of Contents
What’s the Problem?
The recall involves the Breez 2-in-1 Smart Bedroom Fan and White Noise Machine, a product sold as both a bedroom fan and sound machine. The reported defect is inside the unit: the power connector can corrode and cause the fan to overheat, which creates a risk of fire.
That kind of problem can be especially concerning in a bedroom product because it may run overnight, while people are asleep, or for long periods in a nursery, child’s room, or other indoor space. When an electrical product begins overheating, even a small internal failure can quickly turn into smoke, melting, or an active fire event.
Latest Updates
- April 9, 2026 – Snooz recalled Breez 2-in-1 Smart Bedroom Fan and White Noise Machines because the internal power connector can corrode and cause overheating, posing a fire hazard. The recall covered about 11,900 units in the United States and about 140 in Canada, followed six reports of overheating and smoking including one fire, and instructed consumers to stop using affected units and register for a replacement fan. [1]
Product Identification
This recall involves the Breez 2-in-1 Smart Bedroom Fan and White Noise Machine. The product comes in white with a beige stand and includes smart features, a companion app, and a temperature-sensing Auto-Fan Mode.
The recalled units have a removable barrel power jack and a serial number on the underside of the wooden base. Products with serial numbers beginning with BZ10 or BZ02 are included in the recall. Snooz also said Breez 2nd Generation sound machines are not affected, which makes the serial number especially important when identifying whether a unit is part of the recall.
Incidents and Fire Risk
The company reported six cases of the fans overheating and smoking, including one report of a fire. No injuries or property damage had been reported when the recall was announced.
Even without a reported injury count, an overheating bedroom fan is still a serious safety issue. Many consumers use noise machines and fans while sleeping or while a baby or child is resting nearby, so a product that smokes or catches fire can create obvious danger in a setting where people may not notice a problem immediately.
Where and When It Was Sold
The recalled fans were sold online at Amazon, Shopify, Kickstarter, and other small retailers from June 2023 through December 2025. The sale price was about $200.
The importer was Snooz Inc. of Las Vegas, Nevada, and the product was manufactured in China. Purchase history, online order confirmations, and photographs of the underside label may all help confirm whether a consumer owned one of the recalled units.
What Consumers Should Do Now
Consumers should stop using the recalled fan immediately and register through Snooz for a replacement. As part of the recall process, consumers are asked to cut the power cord and upload a photo of the cut cord along with a photo of the adapter showing the model number and other printed information.
If a smoke or fire event already happened, it may be important to preserve the unit, power adapter, photos of the scene, and any repair or insurance records before disposal, if that can be done safely.
Do You Qualify for a Snooz Noise Machine Recall Lawsuit?
A legal review may be appropriate if a recalled Snooz Breez fan overheated, smoked, or caused a fire that led to property damage, medical treatment, or other measurable loss. These cases are often stronger when the unit can be identified clearly and the incident is supported by photos, purchase records, and repair, insurance, or fire-response documentation.
References
- https://www.cpsc.gov/Recalls/2026/SNOOZ-Recalls-Electrical-Fans-Due-to-Fire-Hazard
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