Product recalls are not new, but the way they are happening in 2026 is changing.
Across industries, recalls are becoming more frequent, more visible, and in many cases, more disruptive to brands than they were even a few years ago. The drivers behind recalls are also shifting. It is not just about a single defect or isolated issue anymore. It is about how quickly problems are detected, how broadly they are defined, and how they are communicated once identified.
For manufacturers, the conversation is no longer just about compliance. It is about protecting the brand when something goes wrong, and increasingly, when something might go wrong.
Recent data shows that recall activity has been rising across multiple sectors. In 2025, more than 3,200 product recalls were recorded across major industries, continuing a multi-year upward trend.
At the same time, there has been a shift in scale. Even when the number of recall events fluctuates, the volume of affected units has increased significantly, with some quarters seeing over 200% growth in impacted products.
This creates a different kind of risk. A single issue can now affect far more products, customers, and markets than it might have in the past.
The food and beverage industry continues to see a high number of recalls, but the causes remain relatively consistent:
In 2024 and 2025, undeclared allergens remained one of the leading causes of recalls, followed closely by pathogens such as Listeria, Salmonella, and E. coli.
Recent examples in 2026 show how these issues continue to play out:
What has changed is not the type of issue, but the speed at which it is identified and communicated, and the scope regulators may require companies to include.
One of the most important shifts in recent years is how broadly recalls are defined.
Regulators are increasingly encouraging, and in some cases requiring, companies to expand recall scope beyond a single product line or batch. In certain situations, this has meant recalling all products produced within a timeframe or facility, even when the issue may have originated in a specific area.
This broader approach reflects a focus on preventing risk rather than reacting to it. For companies, it also means that a localized issue can quickly become a much larger operational and brand event.
Outside of food, recalls in consumer products and equipment are being driven largely by safety concerns.
Recent examples include:
In these cases, recalls are often initiated after post-market data or incident reports reveal risks that were not identified during initial production.
The automotive sector remains one of the most visible industries for recalls, largely due to the number of units involved.
Over a recent 12-month period, millions of vehicles were recalled across multiple manufacturers, with some companies accounting for significantly higher volumes than others.
Recent recall drivers include:
Even when issues are isolated, the scale of production means recalls can quickly affect hundreds of thousands of units.
In healthcare-related industries, recalls are often tied to:
Recent data shows that medical device recalls reached one of their highest levels in two decades, driven in part by quality and compliance issues.
These recalls tend to carry additional scrutiny due to the direct impact on patient safety.
What ties all of these industries together is not just the recall itself, but how it affects the brand.
Several factors are driving this:
Recalls are now reported and shared almost immediately across digital platforms. Information spreads quickly, often before a company has fully communicated its response.
When recalls include broader product ranges or timeframes, they reach more customers and attract more attention.
Consumers expect transparency and responsiveness. A slow or unclear response can create as much concern as the issue itself.
Certain issues, such as allergens, contamination, or safety hazards, are widely understood and can quickly become part of broader public conversations.
One part of the recall process that receives less attention is what happens after products are pulled from the market.
Recalled materials, off-spec product, and contaminated goods must be:
This is where waste management becomes part of brand protection.
At Valicor, we often work with facilities that need to manage these materials quickly and responsibly. In those situations, the priority is not just removal, but ensuring that materials are handled in a way that aligns with regulatory expectations and protects the integrity of the brand.
One of the clearest trends in 2026 is that companies are moving toward preparedness rather than reaction.
That includes:
The goal is not to eliminate every possible issue. That is rarely realistic. The goal is to reduce uncertainty and respond effectively when something does happen.
Product recalls are no longer isolated events. They are part of a larger system that includes production, supply chains, regulatory oversight, and post-market response.
For manufacturers, understanding that system, including how materials are handled after they leave the production line, is becoming increasingly important.
In 2026, brand protection is not just about what you make. It is about how you manage everything around it.