Health Canada Recall RA-81926 Adds 762 Units to a Growing 2026 Pattern of Corded Window Covering Failures

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On April 27, 2026, Health Canada issued recall RA-81926 covering 762 custom-made Zebra and Roller blinds manufactured by SoHo Blinds Inc. of Winnipeg, Manitoba, and sold to Canadian households between January 2023 and April 2026. The Zebra blinds fail the federal Corded Window Coverings Regulations and create a strangulation risk for young children. The separate Roller blinds release small parts that pose a choking hazard. As of April 20, 2026, no incidents had been reported in Canada.
The recall is precautionary. It is also the latest entry in a 2026 cluster of window-covering actions that share the same root cause: non-compliance with Canada's child-safety rules for window-covering cords. Eight separate recalls and advisories so far this year. Multiple manufacturers. Different product types — zebra, roller, sunshade, alternating. More than 6,000 documented units in Canadian homes. Read together, they tell a single story: enforcement of the Corded Window Coverings Regulations is intensifying, and custom-made blinds — the kind ordered through local installers and small Canadian manufacturers — are surfacing as the soft spot.
For homeowners and renters with small children, the practical question is no longer whether your blinds were part of a high-profile retail recall. It is whether any window covering in your home — corded, looped, custom, or otherwise — meets the standard. This article walks through what SoHo Blinds owners need to do today, what the eight 2026 recalls have in common, and how to audit your own windows against the rule that ties them all together.
The recall covers two distinct SoHo products built around very different mechanisms. The custom Zebra blinds are dual-layer fabric shades — alternating sheer and solid horizontal bands stacked so the user can dial light through by sliding the layers in and out of alignment. They are operated by a cord with a cord shield. The custom Roller blinds are flat single-panel fabric shades operated by a continuous loop chain.
Health Canada's determinations split along the same product lines. The Zebra blinds do not meet the Corded Window Coverings Regulations, and the regulator warns that young children can pull looped cords around their necks or become entangled, leading to strangulation and even death. The Roller blinds carry a different but parallel risk: components on the shade can detach and become small parts that a child may swallow or inhale. The presence of a cord shield on the Zebra blind is not, on its own, enough to make a corded covering compliant — and the recall makes that point implicitly. These blinds had cord shields and still failed.
All 762 units were manufactured in Canada by SoHo Blinds Inc. in Winnipeg. The recall was published as a Consumer Product Recall in the Household Items category and posted to the OECD Global Portal on Product Recalls — an indication that the file is part of the regulator's active enforcement docket, not a voluntary marketing notice.
Health Canada's instruction is unambiguous: stop using the affected blinds immediately. Take them down or render them inaccessible to children until they are returned, repaired, or remediated through the manufacturer.
To verify whether your unit is part of the recall, gather a few details before contacting SoHo Blinds. The room or window the blind was installed in. The approximate purchase date. Any order paperwork or invoice references you can locate. Custom orders typically do not carry retail UPCs, so the manufacturer has to match a unit to the recalled batch using order records and product-type descriptions.
SoHo Blinds Inc. is the contact point. Call 204‑475‑7646, ext. 1, Monday to Friday, 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. CST, or email info@sohoblinds.ca. Ask specifically whether your order is in the recalled run, what remediation is being offered, and how the company will document the fix for your records.
Under the Canada Consumer Product Safety Act, recalled products cannot be redistributed, sold, or given away in Canada — not at a yard sale, not through online marketplaces, not to friends or relatives. The hazard does not transfer to the next household; it follows the product. The blinds need to come out of circulation entirely.
The SoHo file is not arriving in isolation. Health Canada has been issuing window-covering recalls at an unusually high cadence through the first four months of 2026, and almost every one of them cites the same regulatory failure.
The common thread is the federal Corded Window Coverings Regulations, which came into force on May 1, 2021 after a transition period. The rules cap the length of cords and the size of loops permitted on any window covering sold in Canada. They apply to off-the-shelf retail blinds and custom-made blinds equally — there is no carve-out for small manufacturers or made-to-measure orders.
What is notable about the 2026 cluster is the over-representation of custom and continuous-loop products. RMFL's recalled blinds had cord shields and still failed. Apara–Transiplast's custom roller blinds had end-caps that could detach into choking hazards. The recently published recall of Zebra Blinds by B&B Blinds flagged the same dual hazard profile that the SoHo notice now repeats. Custom orders concentrate the risk because the product is built one window at a time, often with hardware sourced through different suppliers, and compliance verification rests on the manufacturer rather than a retailer's incoming-inspection process. When a small Canadian shop ships a hundred zebra blinds and a few hundred rollers, no big-box gatekeeper is checking cord length and loop diameter against the regulations.
That dynamic is what the pattern is exposing. Eight recalls is not a coincidence. It is a signal.
The numbers behind the regulations are stark. According to Health Canada's blind cord safety guidance, only 22 cm of accessible cord — or a 44 cm loop — can be enough to strangle a small child. From the moment a child becomes entangled, unconsciousness can occur in roughly 15 seconds. Brain damage follows in about four minutes. Death can occur in around six minutes. Children aged one to three are at the highest risk because they are mobile, they explore with their hands and mouths, and they are not yet tall enough to reliably free themselves once entangled.
These figures are why the regulations exist and why the 2026 enforcement pattern matters. Before the rules came into force, an average of one Canadian child per year died from a window-covering cord, and the regulator had recorded 39 deaths and 39 prior recalls related to strangulation hazards between 1989 and early 2019. The current rules are now described by Health Canada as among the strictest in the world, and they apply to every window covering sold in Canada — custom-made and off-the-shelf alike.
The recall record makes one further point clear: a cord shield is not a regulatory pass. Several 2026 recalls — including SoHo's Zebra blinds — covered products that included cord shields or shrouds and still failed inspection. Compliance is about cord length, loop dimensions, and accessibility, not about whether a product looks safe at a glance.
Health Canada's broader guidance is to remove or replace blinds with long accessible cords, starting with rooms where children sleep, play, or spend unsupervised time. The audit does not need to be complicated. It needs to be done.
Walk each room and check three things at every window:
Where a blind fails any of these checks, the regulator's preference — and the practical recommendation that flows from the 2022 Blind and Window Covering Safety brochure — is to replace the blind with a cordless covering rather than try to retrofit. Cordless options are widely available for every standard window size, and products with long accessible cords are no longer legal to sell in Canada through any channel, online or in store. If a corded blind in your home cannot be replaced immediately, keep cords and loops out of children's reach using cleats or tie-downs, and prioritize children's bedrooms first.
When ordering a custom window covering — whether from a national chain or a local shop — ask the installer two specific questions in writing. Does the product comply with the Corded Window Coverings Regulations? And will they provide documentation of compliance for your records? A reputable manufacturer will have an answer ready. A vague answer is itself a flag.
The SoHo recall closes the loop on a thesis the 2026 pattern has been building since January: custom-made and small-batch corded blinds are the current enforcement frontier, and consumers who assume "custom" implies a higher safety bar than mass-market are reading the market backward. The regulator is actively pursuing manufacturers whose products fail testing, the pattern is widening rather than narrowing, and the practical consumer response — both for owners of currently affected products and for buyers shopping today — is to default to cordless.
It is also a reminder that 2026's child-safety enforcement extends well beyond blinds. The same January-to-April window has seen Health Canada actions on Vevor retractable baby gates and other household products that put young children at risk. The window-covering cluster is not a one-off; it is part of a broader regulatory tempo that homeowners are now wise to track.
For the 762 households with SoHo Zebra and Roller blinds installed since 2023, the immediate task is verification and stop-use. For everyone else, the recall is a useful prompt to do the audit you have probably been meaning to do anyway.
About the Author
Ryan is the founder of Homeowner.ca and a proud Canadian homeowner based in Guelph, Ontario. Over his 25-year career in digital publishing, he has focused on transforming complex information into clear, practical guidance that helps people make confident, well-informed decisions.



