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Car Recall Center

What is a recall?

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) oversees safety recalls of motor vehicles as well as tires, child safety seats, and other items of motor vehicle equipment. When one of these products experiences a safety-related defect or is not compliant with a Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard (FMVSS), NHTSA is charged with ensuring public safety.

Although almost all recalls are undertaken voluntarily by manufacturers, they may be strongly encouraged by NHTSA as part of an ongoing safety defect investigation, or advocated for by individuals or consumer groups who can petition NHTSA to open an investigation into a particular defect. Rarely, NHTSA will order an automaker or other supplier to conduct a recall. For a weekly update of the newest recalls, follow our #RecallRoundup via Twitter or Facebook.

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Latest Auto Recall News

CAS Fact Sheet: NHTSA Shutdown Endangers American Drivers

October 8, 2013

Fact Sheet: NHTSA Shutdown Endangers American Drivers (.PDF)

The American public has been forced to assume the risk due to the furlough of employees at the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA).   The agency has furloughed 333 of 597 regulatory staff, issuing the following statement:

Toyota Recalls Vehicles a Second Time

Toyota is recalling about 780,000 vehicles for a second time after its first effort to prevent a handling problem did not work, according to a report posted Sunday on the Web site of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

The recall covers about 18,000 2010 Lexus HS 250h autos, a hybrid model, with the rest being the 2006 through 2011 Toyota RAV4 sport utility vehicle. The agency says the failure of a rear tie rod on the suspension could “cause a loss of vehicle control.”