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Swimming aids and pool toys

Before your child uses swimming aids and pool toys, think safety first with these helpful tips.

Safety standards

Inflatable aquatic toys must meet prescribed design and construction requirements set out in the mandatory standard.

The swimming and flotation aids mandatory standard prescribes requirements for design and construction, including:

  • finish
  • source of buoyancy
  • valves
  • metal parts
  • migration of certain elements
  • webbing or tapes
  • sewed fabric
  • small parts.

Find out more about the:

Check age suitability

Make sure all toys and swimming aids are suitable for your child’s age and weight. Swimming aids and pool toys can provide a false sense of your child’s swimming ability.

Use correctly

Swimming aids and pool toys should be used in a safe manner. This applies to:

  • floaties or water wings
  • noodles
  • kick boards
  • mermaid fins
  • other inflatable and non-inflatable toys.

Do not use pool toys as safety devices.

Check before use

Make sure:

  • the inflatable toy or swimming aid has non-return valves with attached stoppers
  • there are no leaks or damaged valves.

Remove items when not in use

Swimming aids and pool toys should always be removed from the pool area when they are not in use and stored securely off-site. Otherwise, children may be tempted into the pool area without supervision.

Inflatable pool toys should be deflated when not in use.

Always supervise

Children should always be actively supervised by a responsible adult when in the pool area.

A swimming aid or pool toy is not a substitute for supervision.

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Complain or report

Find out how to make a consumer complaint about a business or report a scam or unsafe product.

Subscribe to Safetyzone

Safetyzone newsletter offering product safety news

Anyone interested in product safety, including parents of small children and retails, can read the  Safetyzone newsletter for up-to-date and relevant tips about:

  • industry guidelines
  • safety alerts
  • product bans and recalls.