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
Jun 16, 1976 EA76029 ENGINE COMPARTMENT FIRE Closed
Jun 14, 1976 EA76027 BRAKE PERFORMANCE IN RAIN Closed
Jun 14, 1976 EA76028 AIRBRAKE HOSE BURNED Closed
Jun 3, 1976 DP76010 1972 FORD TORINO TRANSMISSION FAILURES Closed
Jun 2, 1976 EA76026 SPLINES ON STEERING COLUMN Closed
May 17, 1976 EA76025 13 INCH WHEEL FAILURES Closed
May 4, 1976 EA76024 FUEL HOSE FAILS Closed
Apr 15, 1976 EA76023 WHEEL FAILURES Closed
Apr 14, 1976 EA76022 CARBON MONOXIDE INTRUSION Closed
Mar 23, 1976 DP76008 1975 FORD GRANADA CATALYTIC CONVERTER CAUSED CARPET TO BUR Closed
Mar 23, 1976 DP76009 1974 FORD F100 POWER STEERING COLD WEATHER PROBLEMS Closed
Mar 18, 1976 DP76006 1972 VOLKSWAGEN BEETLE UNSTABLE STEERING AND FISHTAILS Closed
Mar 18, 1976 DP76007 1971 SUBARU FF-1 FAILURE OF RACK AND PINION STEERING BOX Closed
Mar 1, 1976 DP76005 1975 FORD ELITE POOR STEERING AND HANDLING Closed
Feb 25, 1976 EA76019 HOUSING FAILS Closed
Feb 25, 1976 EA76020 HOUSING FAILS Closed
Feb 11, 1976 EA76018 CIRCUIT BOARD/RELAY Closed
Feb 2, 1976 EA76017 TIRE-WHEEL ASSY. AIR LKG Closed
Jan 13, 1976 EA76015 ACCELERATOR CABLE Closed
Jan 13, 1976 EA76016 TAILPIPE HANGER FAILURE Closed
Dec 18, 1975 EA76014 DEFROSTER SYSTEM Closed
Dec 15, 1975 EA76012 HARNESS FAILURE Closed
Dec 12, 1975 EA76011 STG. SYSTEM FAILURE Closed
Dec 11, 1975 EA76013 POWER STEERING HOSE Closed
Dec 4, 1975 DP76004 FRONT END VIBRTION, EXCESSIVE STEERING E Closed
Dec 1, 1975 DP76003 FUEL TANK LEAKAGE Closed
Nov 18, 1975 EA76007 BUDD WHEEL LOCK RING Closed
Nov 18, 1975 EA76008 BLOWOUTS - PLY CHAFE Closed
Nov 18, 1975 EA76009 BRAKES - OVERLOADING Closed
Nov 18, 1975 EA76010 SUSPENSION - DRIVETRAIN Closed
Nov 3, 1975 DP76002 1973 CHEVROLET VEGA CARBURETOR,REAR UPPER & LOWER CONTROL AR Closed
Oct 10, 1975 EA76021 CARBON MONOXIDE SEEPAGE Closed
Sep 4, 1975 EA76004 FUEL LEAK AT CANNISTER Closed
Sep 4, 1975 EA76005 FRAME CRACKING Closed
Sep 4, 1975 EA76006 FUEL LINE LOCATION Closed
Aug 29, 1975 EA76003 FUEL TANK LEAK Closed
Jul 31, 1975 EA76002 ACCEL. LINKAGE Closed
Jul 28, 1975 EA76001 HOIST MT. CHANNEL Closed
Jul 20, 1975 DP76001 1974 DODGE D300 WHEEL LUGS/NUTS Closed
Jul 11, 1975 EA75043 BANJO FAILURES Closed
Jun 16, 1975 EA75041 EXHAUST SYSTEMS Closed
Jun 16, 1975 EA75042 FAULTY A PILLAR WELDS Closed
Jun 4, 1975 EA75039 STERING LINKAGE Closed
Jun 4, 1975 EA75040 SEAT BELT GUIDE Closed
May 12, 1975 EA75038 SEAT LATCH Closed
May 1, 1975 EA75037 HELMET LATCH Closed
Mar 28, 1975 DP75001 1973 JEEP CJ5 CARBURETOR FUEL LEAKAGE Closed
Mar 28, 1975 EA75035 BALL JOINT FAILURE Closed
Mar 27, 1975 DP75002 1974 GMC GMC VACUUM BRAKE HOSE FAILURE Closed
Feb 28, 1975 EA75034 ELECTRICAL FIRES 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.