Surprising Recall: 651,000 Gallon Bottles of Valley Springs Water – Including Infant Water

Image of gallon bottle of Valley Springs water on a light blue background with Recall stamped over it

Nobody expects their bottled water to be the problem. It’s water. It’s supposed to be the safe choice. So when the FDA drops an enforcement report saying over 651,000 bottles need to be recalled because they were bottled under “insanitary conditions,” people tend to pay attention. And they should.

Here’s everything you need to know about the Valley Springs Artesian Gold recall, broken down without the bureaucratic fog.

What Triggered the Recall

Valley Springs Artesian Gold, LLC — a bottling company out of Portage, Wisconsin — voluntarily initiated a recall on February 6, 2026. The FDA classified it as a Class II recall on February 26, 2026, which means exposure to the affected product could cause “temporary or medically reversible adverse health consequences.” Not immediately life-threatening, but not something you want to shrug off either.

The reason? The water was bottled under insanitary conditions. That’s it. No elaboration from the company (they didn’t respond to media inquiries), no specific contamination named — just a quiet admission that something went wrong during production, affecting a staggering 651,148 units across multiple product lines.

Which Products Are Affected by the Recall

An infant being fed from a bottle, baby formula
Photo by Lucy Wolski on Unsplash

This isn’t just one SKU on one shelf. The recall covers six distinct products, all under the Valley Springs brand:

  • Valley Springs 1-gallon 100% Natural Bottled Water — UPC 0 31193-00701 9
  • Valley Springs 2.5-gallon 100% Natural Bottled Water — UPC 0 31193-01501 4
  • Valley Springs 1-gallon Infant Water — UPC 0 31193-01401 7 (labeled “Not sterile. Use as directed by physician or by labeling directions for use of infant formula.”)
  • Valley Springs 1-gallon Daisy’s Doggy Water — UPC 0 31193-90100 3 (yes, even the dog water)
  • Valley Springs 1-gallon 100% Natural Bottled Water with Fluoride Added — UPC 0 31193-01301 0
  • Valley Springs 1-gallon Steamed Distilled Water — UPC 0 31193-00601 2

All codes are affected — meaning there’s no “safe batch” to look for. If you have any of these products at home, the FDA’s guidance is straightforward: stop using them immediately.

The inclusion of infant water is particularly worth noting. Parents who purchased this product for formula preparation should treat this recall with extra urgency. The label itself already states it’s not sterile — adding potential contamination from insanitary bottling conditions on top of that is not a risk worth taking.

Where These Products Were Sold

The recalled water was distributed across Illinois and Wisconsin. The FDA enforcement report doesn’t call out specific retailers by name, which is frustrating (understatement of the year), but if you live in either of those states and have purchased Valley Springs bottled water recently, it’s worth checking those UPC numbers against what’s in your fridge or pantry right now.

Why “Insanitary Conditions” Actually Matters

People sometimes see “insanitary conditions” and assume it’s a technicality — like a minor paperwork infraction dressed up in scary language. It’s not.

Bottling water under insanitary conditions can introduce bacteria, mold, environmental contaminants, or other pathogens into a product that people assume is clean and safe. The FDA doesn’t pull a Class II classification out of thin air. It signals a real, if not immediately catastrophic, risk of harm. For most healthy adults, exposure might mean a stomach bug and a bad week. For infants, immunocompromised individuals, or pets — groups literally targeted by products in this recall — the stakes are higher.

What to Do If You Have the Recalled Water

The steps here are mercifully simple:

  1. Check your water. Pull out any Valley Springs bottled water and compare the UPC code against the list above.
  2. Stop using it. Don’t drink it, don’t use it for formula, don’t give it to your dog.
  3. Check for a refund or return policy. While Valley Springs hasn’t issued a public press release, retailers typically honor returns on recalled products. Bring your receipt if you have it.
  4. Monitor for symptoms. If you’ve recently consumed any of these products and experience gastrointestinal issues, consult a healthcare provider.

The FDA’s full enforcement report for this recall is publicly available under Event ID 98410 for those who want the primary source.

The Bigger Picture on Bottled Water Safety

This recall is a good reminder that “natural” and “pure” on a label are marketing words, not guarantees. The bottled water industry is regulated, but recalls happen — and when they do, they often affect hundreds of thousands of units before anyone outside the company even knows there was a problem.

Staying informed isn’t paranoia. It’s just smart.

Author

  • Harmony Daniels

    Harmony Daniels is a freelance writer for Total Apex Media Entertainment and Gaming. She's a rather solitary sort who prefers the company of her cat and a Stephen King novel. When she isn't hustling for her next paycheck, she spends free time listening to music through her noise canceling headphones while reading.

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