These 138 electronic stability control (esc) recall campaigns span at least 40 models across 25 different makes, so this is a defect category that turns up right across the industry rather than at any single brand.

This page pulls together every recall we track that involves the electronic stability control (esc), grouped using NHTSA's own component classification. A recall lands here when the manufacturer or NHTSA traced a safety defect to this system. Pick a model below to see the full recall detail, including the defect, the risk, and the free fix.

Electronic Stability Control (ESC) recalls by make

Models with the most electronic stability control (esc) recalls

ModelRecalls
Ram 25004
Toyota RAV44
BMW 5 Series3
BMW 7 Series3
BMW i53
BMW i73
BMW X13
BMW X53
BMW X63
BMW X73
BMW XM3
Dodge Durango3
Mercedes-Benz G-Class3
Ram 15003
Ram 35003
BMW X22
Chevrolet Malibu2
Chevrolet Silverado 15002
Ford F-1502
GMC Sierra 15002
Jeep Grand Cherokee2
Lexus ES2
Lexus LS2
Lexus RX2
Mercedes-Benz AMG GT2
Mercedes-Benz C-Class2
Mercedes-Benz GLC2
Mercedes-Benz GLE2
Mini Cooper2
Mini Countryman2
Ram ProMaster2
Bentley Bentayga1
BMW i81
BMW X31
Buick LaCrosse1
Cadillac CT61
Cadillac ELR1
Chevrolet Silverado EV1
Chevrolet Suburban1
Chevrolet Tahoe1

About electronic stability control (esc) recalls

A electronic stability control (esc) recall is one NHTSA has classified under its electronic stability control (esc) component group. That covers any safety defect or standards failure traced to that system, from a single part to a software fault that affects how it behaves. Grouping recalls this way makes it easy to see when the same kind of problem shows up across very different vehicles, which often points to a shared supplier part or a design pattern common to the industry rather than a single bad model.

What to do

If your vehicle is on the list below, or you are worried about the electronic stability control (esc) on a car you own or are about to buy, check it by VIN to see whether a free recall repair is open for that exact vehicle. Recall fixes are done at a franchised dealer at no cost, and most never expire. If you are experiencing a electronic stability control (esc) problem that has not been recalled, filing a complaint with NHTSA helps flag it, since enough reports about the same part can lead to an investigation. The fastest check is a VIN recall lookup.

Common questions about electronic stability control (esc) recalls

Which cars have the most electronic stability control (esc) recalls?
Across the models we track, the most electronic stability control (esc) recalls are on the Ram 2500, Toyota RAV4, BMW 5 Series, BMW 7 Series, and BMW i5. A model with more recalls in one area is often a high-volume seller, not necessarily worse than its rivals.
How many electronic stability control (esc) recalls are there?
NHTSA has 138 recall campaigns involving the electronic stability control (esc) on record for 2010 and newer vehicles, led by BMW, Mercedes-Benz, and Ram.
How do I know if my car has a electronic stability control (esc) recall?
Open your model from the list below to see its electronic stability control (esc) recalls, or enter your 17-digit VIN on the recall check page to see the open recalls for your exact vehicle. Recall repairs are free at a franchised dealer.

Recall data comes from NHTSA's Office of Defects Investigation, grouped by NHTSA's component classification. See all components, the methodology, and data sources. Reference only, not legal or safety advice.