Nara Organics Recalled All Lots of Powdered Infant Formula After Infant Botulism Cases: What Parents Should Check Now

Nara Organics has recalled all lots of its powdered infant formula after an infant botulism investigation raised possible health concerns. If you have this formula at home, in a diaper bag, or in backup feeding supplies, stop using it right away.
This is the kind of recall that calls for a quick pantry check, because the action is simple and immediate: identify the canister, set it aside, and follow the company’s return or disposal instructions. The FDA says the recall is tied to an outbreak investigation involving infant botulism and powdered infant formula, and the investigation is being handled with public health partners.
What product is affected
The recall covers all lots of Nara Organics powdered infant formula. Because the notice was expanded to every lot, parents should not assume an unopened canister, a recent purchase, or a container with no obvious damage is safe to keep using.
Check the front and bottom of the canister for the brand name, lot information, and any other package details listed in the official recall notice. If the product matches, stop feeding it to your baby immediately.
Why the formula was recalled
According to the FDA recall notice, the action was taken because of a possible health risk connected to infant botulism cases. The FDA outbreak investigation page also shows that this issue is being tracked as a powdered infant formula investigation with CDC involvement.
The key point for families is not to wait for symptoms to appear before acting on a matching product. The recall is already in place, and the official guidance is to remove the formula from use now.
Where it was sold
The FDA notice should be used as the source for confirmed distribution and retail details. If you bought Nara Organics formula through a store, online retailer, warehouse club, or another seller, check the purchase source along with the package codes so you can match it against the official notice.
If you are sorting through several types of formula, check the pantry, refrigerator, freezer, diaper bag, and any emergency backup supplies you keep for caregivers, grandparents, or daycare.
What parents and caregivers should do now
- Stop using any Nara Organics powdered infant formula immediately.
- Isolate the canister so it is not accidentally used for another feeding.
- Check the canister codes and lot information against the official recall notice.
- Confirm where it was purchased so you can follow the correct return, disposal, or refund steps.
- Follow the company’s instructions for returning the product, disposing of it, or requesting a refund if that is what the notice directs.
If a baby has already consumed the formula and seems unwell, contact a healthcare professional right away. Do not wait to see whether the issue passes on its own.
For families doing a fast kitchen check, this recall is worth taking seriously today. A few minutes spent looking at formula cans now can prevent a risky feeding choice later. Keep an eye on the FDA and CDC updates for the latest investigation details and any further instructions.
