Ford Recalls 254,640 Vehicles for Key Safety Failures
Ford Motor is recalling 254,640 vehicles in the United States following a safety notice from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) on March 24, 2026. The action addresses a critical defect where the rearview camera image and advanced driver assistance features can fail without warning. This loss of functionality, including pre-collision assist and blind-spot monitoring, increases the risk of a crash and represents a significant safety concern for the automaker.
Tech Issues Drive Recalls Affecting Over 1 Million Fords
This latest recall is not an isolated incident but part of a wider pattern of technology-related quality control issues for Ford. It follows a separate, larger recall of 849,310 Ford Bronco (2021-2026 models) and Ford Edge (2021-2024 models) vehicles for a fault in the accessory protocol interface module that can cause the rearview camera display to go blank. Another recall announced on March 18 involves certain 2022-2025 Lincoln models where the Image Processing Module A may reset, disabling the same critical safety systems. These repeated issues across different models point to a systemic challenge in integrating complex electronics.
Ford's Recall Volume Vastly Exceeds General Motors in 2026
The scale of Ford's recalls starkly contrasts with its primary Detroit competitor. Through mid-March 2026, General Motors has recalled a total of 80,005 vehicles across eight separate campaigns. In comparison, Ford's two largest recalls for camera issues alone already total over 1.1 million vehicles this year. While GM had the second-highest number of individual recall incidents, Ford's volume of affected vehicles is substantially larger, indicating more widespread production issues that could lead to higher warranty costs and damage to brand reputation among consumers.