NHTSA Investigations
5,336 safety defect investigations.
NHTSA Safety Defect Investigations
Browse 5,336 NHTSA safety defect investigations. When a potential safety issue is identified through consumer complaints, recall requests, or other sources, NHTSA opens an investigation to determine the scope and severity of the defect. Investigations may lead to voluntary recalls by manufacturers or, in rare cases, mandatory recall orders. Use the filters below to search by year, manufacturer, status, or keyword.
Investigations
Browse 5,336 NHTSA investigations.
| Opened | ID | Vehicle | Subject | Units | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sep 28, 1972 | EA72024 | — | AIR LOSS PROBLEM | — | Closed |
| Sep 25, 1972 | EA72023 | — | HATCHBACK STRUT | — | Closed |
| Sep 22, 1972 | EA72022 | — | REAR AXLE HOUSING CRACKS | — | Closed |
| Sep 20, 1972 | EA72025 | — | ACCELERATOR STICKING | — | Closed |
| Sep 7, 1972 | EA72012 | — | TIE ROD SLEEVE | — | Closed |
| Sep 7, 1972 | EA72013 | — | DOOR LATCH AND FUEL TANK | — | Closed |
| Sep 7, 1972 | EA72014 | — | TIE ROD FAILURE | — | Closed |
| Sep 7, 1972 | EA72015 | — | SLIPPAGE OF PITMAN ARM | — | Closed |
| Sep 6, 1972 | EA72063 | — | FRONT SUSPENSION | — | Closed |
| Aug 23, 1972 | EA72016 | — | STEERING LINKAGE | — | Closed |
| Aug 23, 1972 | EA72017 | — | TIE ROD END KIT | — | Closed |
| Aug 16, 1972 | EA72011 | — | ALLEGED DEFECT | — | Closed |
| Aug 15, 1972 | EA72010 | — | WHEEL BEARING | — | Closed |
| Aug 15, 1972 | EA72021 | — | TORQUE CONTROL | — | Closed |
| Aug 10, 1972 | EA72009 | — | ALLEGED DEFECTS | — | Closed |
| Aug 5, 1972 | EA72008 | — | TIRE EXPLOSION | — | Closed |
| Aug 4, 1972 | EA72045 | — | SEAT/SHLDR BELT DRGRADATIO | — | Closed |
| Jul 18, 1972 | EA72005 | — | BRAKE PEDAL BLOCKAGE | — | Closed |
| Jul 11, 1972 | EA72002 | — | HOOD LATCH FAILURE | — | Closed |
| Jul 11, 1972 | EA72006 | — | SEAT BELT BUCKLE RELEASE | — | Closed |
| Jul 10, 1972 | EA72007 | — | THROTTLE LINKAGE | — | Closed |
| Jun 15, 1972 | EA72020 | — | HEATER HOSE | — | Closed |
| Jun 13, 1972 | EA72001 | — | HEATER HOSE | — | Closed |
| Jun 2, 1972 | EA72004 | — | AIR CONDITIONING | — | Closed |
| Jun 2, 1972 | EA72019 | — | OIL IN BRAKE SYSTEM | — | Closed |
| May 8, 1972 | EA72056 | — | POWER STEERING | — | Closed |
| Mar 13, 1972 | EA72003 | — | EXHAUST SYSTEM FIRE | — | Closed |
| Mar 10, 1972 | EA72057 | — | FRONT SPRING SAG | — | Closed |
| — | DP77006 | — | FAILURE OF REAR AIR BRAKE SYSTEM | — | Closed |
| — | ID92001 | — | ID | — | Closed |
| — | ID92002 | — | ID | — | Closed |
| — | ID92004 | — | ID | — | Closed |
| — | ID92005 | — | ID | — | Closed |
| — | ID93001 | — | ID | — | Closed |
| — | ID93002 | — | ID | — | Closed |
| — | ID93004 | — | ID | — | Closed |
| — | ID93005 | — | ID | — | Closed |
| — | ID93006 | — | ID | — | Closed |
| — | ID93007 | — | ID | — | Closed |
| — | ID93008 | — | ID | — | Closed |
| — | ID93009 | — | ID | — | Closed |
| — | ID93010 | — | ID | — | Closed |
| — | ID93011 | — | ID | — | Closed |
| — | ID93012 | — | ID | — | Closed |
| — | ID93013 | — | ID | — | Closed |
| — | ID93014 | — | ID | — | Closed |
| — | ID93015 | — | ID | — | Closed |
| — | ID94001 | — | ID | — | Closed |
| — | ID94002 | — | ID | — | Closed |
| — | ID94003 | — | ID | — | Closed |
Frequently Asked Questions
When NHTSA receives enough complaints or evidence suggesting a potential safety defect in a vehicle, it opens a formal investigation. The process typically begins with a Preliminary Evaluation (PE) to assess whether a defect trend exists, followed by an Engineering Analysis (EA) if the evidence warrants deeper examination. Investigations can result in voluntary recalls by the manufacturer, mandatory recall orders, or closure if no defect is confirmed.
An "Open" investigation means NHTSA is actively reviewing the potential safety defect — engineers are collecting data, analyzing complaints, and may be testing vehicles. A "Closed" investigation means the review is complete. Closure can mean the manufacturer issued a recall, NHTSA determined no defect exists, or the issue was resolved through other means such as a technical service bulletin or design change in newer models.
Roughly half of NHTSA investigations result in a safety recall. The rest are closed without a recall — either because the defect couldn't be confirmed, the failure rate was too low to warrant a recall, or the manufacturer addressed the issue voluntarily through other channels. Investigations involving higher injury or fatality counts, or those affecting a large number of vehicles, are more likely to result in recalls.