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April 23, 2026 – Lil Pick Up Inc. of Rowland Heights, California recalled about 4,900 Rex110 and Sierra110 youth ATVs sold from January 2023 through January 2026 for $600 to $800 after one death involving a 6-year-old boy riding with a passenger in 2025. The ATVs violate federal mandatory safety standards by exceeding maximum speed limitations for children ages 6 and older, having defective mechanical suspension, featuring throttles that can stick during use, and developing footwell surfaces that reach temperatures causing severe burns.[1]
One Child Dead
A 6-year-old boy died in 2025 from a crash involving a Rex110 ATV while riding with a passenger. Federal law prohibits youth ATVs from carrying passengers, but nothing prevented this child from attempting it.
Violates Federal Mandatory Standards
These ATVs violate the federal mandatory ATV safety standard—not voluntary guidelines but actual legal requirements. Lil Pick Up knowingly sold nearly 5,000 ATVs that failed to meet safety laws designed to protect children.
Excessive Speed for Child ATVs
The ATVs exceed maximum speed limitations for vehicles intended for children ages 6 and older. Federal standards cap speeds on youth ATVs specifically because children lack the reflexes and judgment to safely control faster machines.
Defective Mechanical Suspension
The mechanical suspension fails to comply with safety requirements. Suspension systems affect stability, handling, and rollover risk—defective suspension on a child’s ATV creates crash hazards on uneven terrain.
Stuck Throttle Hazard
The throttle can get stuck during use, causing uncontrolled acceleration. A child whose ATV suddenly accelerates without releasing the throttle faces immediate crash risk from losing control.
Severe Burn Risk from Footwells
Footwell surfaces reach high temperatures during use, posing severe burn risks. Children riding in shorts, light pants, or with exposed skin can suffer serious burns just from operating the ATV normally.
Two Models Recalled
Rex110 ATVs sold from January 2023 through November 2025, while Sierra110 models sold from January 2024 through January 2026. Both models share the same dangerous defects despite different names.
Multiple Brand Names
The ATVs sold under brand names including Seangles, MOTOTEC, OFFROAD MALL, and EXTREME printed on the side body or handlebar cover. Multiple brands obscure the fact that all came from the same defective manufacturer.
Thirteen Color Options
Colors include black, blue, silver, green, orange, pink, burgundy, spider black, spider blue, spider red, green camo, purple camo, and pink camo. The variety of flashy colors marketed these dangerous machines directly to children.
VIN Plate Identification
Model names Rex110 or Sierra110 appear on the VIN plate on the front frame column. A plate also states “This ATV is subject to LIL PICK UP INC’s Action Plan approved by the U.S. Consumer Products Safety Commission.”
Wide Retail Distribution
Retailers included Cougar Cycle, Texas Star DBA Flying Scooter, Vitacci Motorcycles, ODES USA, BV Powersports, Tool Store Go-Kart Shop, Offroad Mall, and Triple J Imports. Both online and in-store sales distributed defective youth ATVs nationwide.
Manufactured in Vietnam
Lil Pick Up Inc. imported these ATVs from manufacturers in Vietnam. International manufacturing creates quality control challenges and complicates accountability when defective products kill children.
The $600 to $800 Price Point
At $600 to $800, these weren’t impulse purchases—families invested serious money believing they were buying safe youth ATVs. Instead, they got machines that violated federal safety standards and killed a child.
Free Pickup and Transportation
The recall offers full refunds with free ATV pickup and transportation. Consumers must register at lilpickup.us to receive instructions for returning the recalled ATVs.
Single Operator Design
The ATVs are designed and intended for a single operator, but the fatal crash involved a 6-year-old riding with a passenger. Design intent doesn’t prevent children from attempting dangerous passenger riding.
Crash Hazards Combined
Excessive speed plus defective suspension plus stuck throttles create compounding crash risks. Any single defect is dangerous—combining all three on a child’s ATV is catastrophic.
The Burn Injury Addition
Beyond crash hazards, the severe burn risk from hot footwells adds another layer of danger. Children can suffer serious injuries even without crashing if they touch overheated surfaces during normal operation.
Marketing to Children
Pink, purple, and spider-themed color schemes directly target young children. Marketing deadly machines in colors and designs appealing to kids demonstrates complete disregard for child safety.
Contact an Attorney
If your child was injured or killed on a Lil’ Pickup Rex110 or Sierra110 ATV, contact a product liability attorney immediately. Preserve the ATV exactly as it is without returning it to the company yet, photograph all injuries or the accident scene, save all medical records or death certificates, keep purchase receipts and assembly instructions, and document any burns, crashes, or throttle failures that occurred.
References
1. https://www.cpsc.gov/Recalls/2026/Lil-Pick-Up-Recalls-Youth-All-Terrain-Vehicles-ATVs-Due-to-Risk-of-Serious-Injury-or-Death-from-Crash-and-Burn-Hazards-Violates-Mandatory-Standard-for-ATVs-One-Death-Reported
