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Tesla is recalling 14,575 Model Y SUVs in the United States after federal safety regulators found some vehicles were produced without required weight certification labels.
The affected cars were built at Tesla’s Fremont, California plant between Nov. 17, 2024 and April 21, 2026, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said on May 22, 2026.
The omission was traced to a malfunctioning automated vision-scanning tool that failed to verify label installation; Tesla has repaired the system and added a human verification step on the production line.
The company estimates roughly 45% of the recalled vehicles are actually missing the sticker, which shows maximum loaded weight, tire specifications and manufacture date.
Because the defect is physical rather than software-based, owners must bring vehicles to service centers for inspection and replacement labels where needed.
NHTSA reported no crashes, injuries or fatalities linked to the issue.
Notification letters are scheduled to be mailed beginning July 17, and the recall is filed under SB-26-19-002.
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While this recall is a routine corrective action requiring service visits to install missing labels, it highlights recurring industry issues: production QA gaps and overreliance on automated inspection. Expect reputational fallout, regulatory scrutiny and added manual checks on assembly lines.


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