Dehumidifiers are meant to protect homes from mold and mildew, not burn them down. Yet, that’s apparently a possibility for 3.4 million dehumidifiers — covering dozens of brands, including GE, Honeywell, Kenmore, and Sunbeam — that are being recalled after being linked to $4.8 million in property damage.

According to the Consumer Product Safety Commission, China-based electronics manufacturer Midea is recalling the dehumidifiers, made under its own brand name and for dozens of other brands (see full list below) after receiving 38 reports of smoke and fire resulting from overheated devices.

While there has been nearly $5 million in property damage, the company says it is unaware of any injuries related to the fires. Still, Midea and the CPSC urge consumers to immediately turn off and unplug the dehumidifiers.

The recall covers 25, 30, 40, 50, 60, 65, 70, and 75-pint dehumidifiers from the following brands:

Airworks

Alen

Arctic King

Arcticaire

Beaumark

Comfort Star

ComfortAire

Continental Electric

Coolworks

Crosley

Daewoo

Danby

Danby Designer

Dayton

Degree

Diplomat

Edgestar

Excell

Fellini

Forest Air

Frigidaire

GE

Grunaire

Hanover

Homestyles

Honeywell

Hyundai

Ideal Air

Kenmore

Keystone

Kul

Midea

Nantucket

Ocean Breeze

Pelonis

Perfect Aire

Perfect Home

Polar Wind

Premiere

Professional Series

Royal Sovereign

Simplicity

SPT

Sunbeam

Sylvania

TGM

Touch Point

Trutemp

Uberhaus

Westpointe

Winix

Winixl

The devices were sold at Lowes, Menards, PC Richard and other stores nationwide for $100 to $300 from Jan. 2003 to Dec. 2013.

Owners of affected devices should contact Midea for a replacement unit or partial refunds. According to the recall, consumers whose dehumidifiers were manufactured before Oct. 1, 2008 will receive a partial refund, not a replacement.

Affected products can be identified by brand name, model number, pint capacity, and manufacture date printed on the nameplate sticker on the back of the dehumidifier. To determine if your dehumidifier has been recalled, enter the model number at https://www.recallrtr.com/dehumidifier.

The recall of Midea-manufactured humidifiers comes seven months after federal safety regulators imposed a recored $15.45 million civil penalty against Gee Electric Appliances related to dehumidifiers recalled in 2013 and 2014. The penalty settled charges that Gee failed to report fires, “knowingly made misrepresentations to CPSC staff,” and put UL safety marks on products that didn’t meet UL standards.