About Dawolrp Fire Pits

Dawolrp markets itself as a home lifestyle brand committed to “blending functionality with a touch of elegance” — and its tabletop fire pit is a key product in that lineup. The company sells rectangular metal fire pits on Amazon in black and charcoal gray, each packaged with four roasting sticks for making s’mores, and designed to burn isopropyl alcohol, ethyl alcohol, or bioethanol fuel.

The product’s instructions direct users to use the MAX line inside the fuel cup as a fill guide — a line that multiple customers report simply does not exist on the actual product. One reviewer noted filling the chamber with multiple 450ml bottles of 70% ethyl alcohol during a single use session, with no guidance on how much was too much.

Why Missing Safety Markings Matter

Overfilling an alcohol-burning fire pit is one of the most direct pathways to a pool fire — the hazard that occurs when excess pooled fuel suddenly generates larger, hotter flames that extend well beyond the fire pit’s boundaries [1]. A product that directs users to follow a fill line that doesn’t exist effectively gives users no guidance at all — and then exposes them to the consequences of that omission.

That gap between what the instructions say and what the product provides is exactly the kind of failure-to-warn claim that attorneys bring in product liability cases. When a manufacturer tells a user to take a specific safety precaution but fails to provide the means to do so, any resulting injury is foreseeable — and potentially the manufacturer’s legal responsibility.

The Broader Regulatory Crisis

Dawolrp’s missing MAX line is one brand-specific example of a much larger problem the federal government has formally identified. In December 2024, the CPSC declared that alcohol-burning tabletop fire pits are “extremely dangerous” and linked them to at least two deaths and 60 or more injuries since 2019, calling on consumers to stop using them and sellers to stop selling them [1]. The CPSC found these products violate voluntary safety standard ASTM F3363-19, which was specifically designed to prevent pool fires and flame jetting.

Despite that warning, Amazon continued selling alcohol-burning fire pit fuel for more than six months afterward, ultimately leading to the November 2025 recall of more than 18,000 bottles of MoonSoll and Magic Chems ethanol fuel that lacked required flame mitigation devices [2].

The Second Hazard: Refueling

Beyond overfilling, Dawolrp’s product also carries the flame jetting hazard that has caused some of the worst injuries in this product category. When a user pours fresh fuel near a residual flame that is nearly invisible to the naked eye, the incoming alcohol can ignite instantly and propel burning liquid outward in a blowtorch-like burst that can engulf a person before they have time to react.

Dawolrp’s own listing warns: “never add alcohol while the tabletop fire pit is burning.” That warning cannot be meaningfully followed when the user cannot see whether the fire is still burning — which is the case with virtually every alcohol fuel these products accept.

Can I File a Lawsuit?

Consumers who were burned while using a Dawolrp tabletop fire pit — whether from an overfill-caused pool fire, a flame jetting explosion, or another alcohol fuel hazard — may have significant legal options against the manufacturer, seller, or retailer. A class action lawsuit could allow affected consumers to seek compensation for medical expenses, pain and suffering, permanent scarring or disfigurement, lost wages, and other related losses. Contact an attorney promptly to have your case evaluated.

References

1. https://www.cpsc.gov/Warnings/2025/Consumer-Alert-Stop-Using-Alcohol-or-Other-Liquid-Burning-Fire-Pits-That-Violate-Voluntary-Standards-and-Present-Flame-Jetting-and-Fire-Hazards-Two-Deaths-and-Dozens-of-Serious-Burn-Injuries-Reported

2. https://www.aboutlawsuits.com/fire-pit-lawsuit/amazon-tabletop-fire-pit-fuel-recall-deadly-risk-of-flash-fire/

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