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Honda has issued a recall covering 440,830 Odyssey minivans sold in the United States from the 2018–2022 model years after the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration found a software defect that can cause second- and third-row side curtain airbags to deploy unexpectedly.
NHTSA documents say the supplemental restraint system’s control logic can misinterpret certain G-signal inputs—caused by rough pavement, potholes, speed bumps, road debris or underbody impacts—as side impacts, prompting inadvertent deployment.
Honda has recorded about 130 warranty claims and 25 reports of injury tied to the defect; no deaths have been reported.
The company first identified a possible issue in November 2017, investigated through 2021 and initially closed the matter, but reopened it after a NHTSA preliminary review in October 2025.
Owners will be instructed to bring affected vehicles to dealers for reprogramming of the SRS electronic control unit or replacement with corrected software-loaded units.
Registered owners will be contacted and can check recall status through Honda’s recall portal or the NHTSA database.








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