Recall NewsApril 30, 2026 · 5 min read read

Recall Roundup: April 2026 — Ford, GM, Toyota, Stellantis & More

NHTSA's April 2026 recall activity covered a broad range of vehicles from major manufacturers. If you own any of the vehicles listed below, check your VIN immediately using MyOBDCode's free recall checker.

Recalls are always repaired free of charge at authorized dealerships.

Ford F-150 — Fuel system leak risk

Affected vehicles: Select 2023–2025 Ford F-150 trucks
Risk: A fuel line fitting may loosen over time, creating a fuel leak that significantly increases fire risk in the engine compartment.
What to do: Schedule a dealer inspection immediately. Ford will replace the fuel line fitting at no charge.

Chevrolet Silverado / GMC Sierra — Brake fluid contamination

Affected vehicles: Select 2024–2025 Chevrolet Silverado 1500 and GMC Sierra 1500
Risk: Brake fluid may become contaminated during assembly, potentially causing reduced braking performance over time.
What to do: GM dealers will flush and replace the brake fluid system free of charge.

Toyota RAV4 — Seatbelt pretensioner issue

Affected vehicles: Select 2024–2026 Toyota RAV4 and RAV4 Hybrid
Risk: The front seatbelt pretensioners may not deploy correctly in a collision, reducing occupant protection.
What to do: Contact your Toyota dealer immediately for a free seatbelt pretensioner inspection and replacement.

Stellantis (Chrysler/Dodge/Jeep/Ram) — Software affecting stability control

Affected vehicles: Various 2024–2025 Chrysler Pacifica, Dodge Durango, Jeep Grand Cherokee, and Ram 1500 models
Risk: A software error may cause the electronic stability control (ESC) system to activate unexpectedly or fail to activate when needed.
What to do: Dealers will perform a free software update (OTA update may be available for some models).

How to check if your vehicle is affected

Use any of these three methods:

  1. Enter your make, model, and year at myobdcode.com/recall-check
  2. Decode your 17-character VIN at myobdcode.com/vin-lookup — open recalls shown instantly
  3. Search NHTSA.gov/recalls directly

Recall repairs are always free. Contact your dealership as soon as possible — some high-risk recalls may qualify for a loaner vehicle while yours is being repaired.

🔧
Have a check engine code?

Look up your exact code free — urgency rating, causes, and repair cost ranges.

Decode my code →
More guides
← Back to all articles