Toyota Recalls 162,000 Trucks For Faulty Displays
On January 23, 2026, Toyota announced a safety recall for 162,000 of its 2024-2025 Tundra and Tundra Hybrid vehicles in the U.S. The action addresses a critical defect where the multimedia display can become stuck or go entirely black. This failure prevents the rearview camera image from appearing when the vehicle is in reverse, a non-compliance with federal safety standards that elevates the risk of a crash. The automaker plans to notify owners of the affected trucks by late March.
Tundra Quality Issues Exceed 1 Million Vehicles
This latest event is part of a persistent series of quality control problems for the Tundra line, with total recalls for the model now exceeding 1.1 million vehicles since 2022. In November, Toyota recalled 127,000 Tundras from 2022-2024 due to engine contamination risks that could cause a loss of power. That followed an October recall of 394,000 Tundra and Tundra Hybrids for a separate software issue also affecting the rearview display, and a May 2025 recall of 443,000 trucks for a reverse light failure. This pattern suggests systemic issues in the Tundra's manufacturing and supply chain.
Toyota Recalled 3.2 Million Vehicles in 2025
Zooming out, Toyota's quality issues extended beyond the Tundra model last year. The company recalled a total of 3.2 million vehicles in the United States during 2025, spread across 15 separate recall campaigns. While significant, this figure was substantially lower than that of its competitor, Ford, which set an industry record by recalling 12.9 million vehicles in the same year across 153 separate notices. The repeated recalls place Toyota's long-standing reputation for reliability under increased investor and consumer scrutiny.