
Certain products, like a blender with a defective blade or an overheated lamp, make recalls seem almost commonplace. Recalls that land differently is another. The news doesn’t sit well when the product in question is a car seat, the one item parents fully rely on to safeguard the most vulnerable member of their family. It spreads quickly, makes its way through pediatric forums and parent groups, and ends up in the inboxes of people who believed they had already made the right decision.
In late September 2025, Evenflo announced a voluntary recall of over 300,000 Revolve360 Slim car seats. To put it simply, the specific problem is that in some models, a child sitting in the rear-facing position can reach behind the cushion, pull at the headrest, and move a piece of foam. Once loose, that foam may find its way into the mouth or nose of a young child. Evenflo took care to point out that it is non-toxic. However, non-toxicity does not imply safety for ingestion.
| Information Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Company Name | Evenflo Company, Inc. |
| Founded | 1920 |
| Headquarters | Miamisburg, Ohio, USA |
| Product Recalled | Revolve360 Slim Car Seat (select models) |
| Affected Model Numbers | Models beginning with 3681 |
| Units Affected | 300,000+ (U.S. and Canada) |
| Recall Type | Voluntary |
| NHTSA Recall Number | 25C010 |
| Reason for Recall | Children can dislodge headrest foam — choking hazard |
| Injuries Reported | None (as of recall date) |
| Recall Announced | September 30, 2025 |
| Remedy | Free repair kit with protective tape seal |
| U.S. Customer Helpline | 1-800-233-5921 (Mon–Fri, 8AM–5PM EST) |
| Canada Helpline | 1-800-265-0749 |
| Official Reference Website | Evenflo Recall Page |
Before the recall was announced, Evenflo had received eleven reports of kids removing foam fragments from the headrest. There were no reported injuries. Eleven is a small number when compared to the 300,000 units sold, and it’s possible that the majority of families who use this seat won’t have any issues at all. However, there is no warning when it comes to choking hazards. You only have a brief moment. Eleven reports are sufficient to be taken seriously, which is probably why Evenflo took action before authorities compelled them to.
Models sold in the US and Canada with numbers starting with 3681 are covered by the recall. It was given recall number 25C010 by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. Interestingly, the original Revolve360 and the Revolve360 Extend, which have different headrest designs, are unaffected by this. Newer Slim models with numbers beginning with CS2601 or 3682, which already come with a protective tape seal, are also unaffected. Before declaring the recall of the older production runs, Evenflo essentially resolved the issue in the more recent ones. That is noteworthy, but it also begs the question of why the tape seal was absent in the first place.
The solution itself is simple. All registered owners will receive free repair kits from Evenflo, which include a unique tape that covers the foam access points in the headrest. There are instructions included. Families using the impacted seats were asked to keep a close eye on their children in the interim, particularly to see if they could reach or tug at the foam, as the company anticipated shipping the kits in early November. Evenflo’s advice was clear: stop using the seat right away and get in touch with the ParentLink Consumer Care team.
The Revolve360 Slim’s reputation makes it difficult to ignore the parents who purchased it. The seat’s 360-degree rotation feature, which makes buckling a rear-facing infant much easier—a real convenience that matters at six in the morning in a chilly parking garage—won the seat genuine praise from the child safety community. It had been recommended for months by parenting forums. The recall was thoroughly covered by Safe in the Seat, a reputable resource for child passenger safety technicians, which reached an audience that pays close attention to this field. The recall was more startling, not less, because of the trust that Evenflo had built around this product.
Here, there’s a more general pattern that’s worth considering. In the US, car seat recalls are common; the extensive NHTSA database covers everything from structural issues to buckle failures. However, the Revolve360 Slim occupies a specific market position and price range. Parents who are actively researching and making careful selections are the target market for this type of seat, which is sold at major retailers like Target and costs enough to feel premium. When a product intended for knowledgeable, cautious consumers turns out to have a flaw, it tends to undermine trust in ways that go beyond a straightforward defect report.
Evenflo has responded with competence. Rather than waiting for the number to increase, the company appears to have taken the eleven reports seriously, as evidenced by the voluntary nature of the recall that took place before a mandatory order. The kit for repairs is free. There is no need to return or replace the seat. Additionally, the company made it clear that the recall has no effect on crash performance and that the Revolve360 Slim’s structural integrity is unaffected. As long as the foam is intact and out of reach, parents can safely continue to use the seat.
A parent who recently learned that their child’s seat is on a recall list may not find that reassurance entirely comforting. You get the impression that even the most transparent recall procedure leaves a residue of uncertainty that no repair kit can fully resolve when you watch this kind of situation develop.
