The numbers are frightening: Every 17 minutes someone is injured by furniture, a TV or an appliance tipping on them, and about every ten days a child dies from a tip-over incident.
Parents might be surprised to learn that furniture, including dressers, are not required to be tested before they are sold. As exclusive new Consumer Reports testing reveals, there are big differences when it comes to dresser stability.
Consumer Reports bought 24 models from different furniture manufacturers, then evaluated them based on three different tests.
Thirteen dressers passed all the tests, while 11 failed at least one test. Dressers from Pottery Barn, Epoch, and Sauder, among others, passed CRβs 60-pound test, while models from South Shore and Ameriwood failed a 50-test. Both South Shore and Ameriwood say their products meet voluntary safety standards.
So how can you tell if a dresser in your home is secure? You canβt tell if a dresser is going to tip-over just by looking at it. Which is why Consumer Reports is pushing for mandatory safety standards and says all furniture should be properly anchored to a wall.
To read more about the tests conducted by Consumer Reports, click here.
NBC San Diego reached out to Ikea in response to the testing conducted by Consumer Reports. To read their full statement, click here.