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Nissan Recall Check

Detailed Vehicle History’s Nissan Recall Check lets you confirm open recalls by VIN in seconds. View safety defects, affected parts, and repair status, then book your free dealer fix. Enter your VIN to protect your family, preserve value, and keep your Nissan compliant and road-ready.

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What is a Nissan Recall?

When a problem threatens safety, Nissan or the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) issues a recall and directs owners to free dealer repairs. With Nissan Recall Check by Detailed Vehicle History, see if your VIN is affected, what parts are involved, and what to do next.

Why Should You Check the Nissan Recall History?

Conducting a Nissan Recall Check provides used-car buyers and current owners with important information in a matter of seconds. You can quickly find out if there are any safety defects, understand the associated risks, and learn how to get them repaired at no cost through an authorized dealer. Here are some reasons why you should perform a recall check:

1. Avoid Unsafe Nissan Vehicles

Avoid an unsafe Nissan. When defects are found, Nissan or regulators issue a recall and authorize no-cost repairs. Fixing recalls quickly prevents accidents, ensures compliance, and helps maintain value when it’s time to sell or trade.

Car Safety Checking
Car Compliance Checking

2. Compliance

Recalls exist to correct safety defects and compliance gaps. A Nissan Recall Check provides status, affected components, and remedy eligibility. If a Nissan is sold or driven with an open recall, the owner may face avoidable risk, disclosure issues, and value loss. Retaining documentation shows the vehicle meets required standards and reduces future friction.

Check Common Safety-Related Issues

A Nissan Recall Check confirms whether your vehicle has any open safety recalls. Knowing there are none reduces risk and future expense.

It helps you avoid hidden problems such as the infamous Takata airbag issues, engine failure risk, and other notable issues, such as rear door strut brackets, that may not show up on a test drive but can lead to danger if ignored.

Ensuring Car Safety

How to Run Nissan Recalls

Get the Nissan recalls report in under a minute by following these simple steps below:

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Locate Your Nissan VIN

To start your Nissan recall search, grab the VIN. Look at the driver-side dashboard, the jamb/pillar label, or on your registration, insurance documents, and title.

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Fill in the Form

Start your Nissan recall check by entering your VIN. No VIN? Enter your license plate number instead.

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Receive Your Nissan Recall Report

We’ll process your details and generate your Nissan recalls report. When it’s ready, open the report to review any open recalls and remedies.

What is on the Nissan Recall Check?

A Nissan recall check shows detailed information about safety recalls affecting your vehicle. Here’s what you can find in a Nissan recall report:

  • Date of recalls: Shows when Nissan or NHTSA announced the recall, helping you gauge urgency and plan dealer service promptly.
  • Affected Component: Clearly lists the Nissan part or system involved, so you know what failed and what technicians will examine.
  • Consequences: Briefly states what could happen if unfixed, making the safety priority obvious without technical language.
  • Next step for the affected Nissan: Check if your Nissan is affected by the recall and book your repair appointment. A full Vehicle Report also shows previous recalls and repair history.

Besides recalling history, a Nissan vehicle history report also includes a title check, ownership records, accident and damage records, auction history, and more. More details can be found in the explanation below:

Car Recalls Fix

Title Check


Uncover title issues like salvage, flood, lemon, or rebuilt status. Title issues lower the Nissan resale value and may cause insurance difficulties.

Ownership Records


The Nissan history report includes past ownership changes, including the purchase date, location, and duration of the ownership.


Recalls checking
Recalls checking

Accident & Damage Records


See if a Nissan has been involved in accidents or experienced structural damage, as well as the severity of incidents.

Auction History


Our report shows if your Nissan passed through an auction, including the auction date, price range, and condition.

How to Find Vehicle Owner Details Online?
Car Accident Report

Warranty Status History


Shows if your Nissan still has factory protection. Detailed Vehicle History pairs warranty and recall status so you can plan service and costs confidently.

Lien/loan records


Our report shows if your Nissan passed through an auction, including the auction date, price range, and condition.

Mileage for a New Car

Common Issues Leading to Nissan Recall

Nissan vehicles have faced several recalls due to safety and reliability concerns. Common issues include the infamous Takata airbag issues, engine failure risk, and other notable issues, such as rear door strut brackets. Below are some of the causes behind the Nissan recall notices.

Body & Chassis Safety Defects

Faulty Engine Bearings


On June 27, 2025, Nissan and NHTSA issued a recall for VC-Turbo bearing defects. This defect affected some Rogue, Altima, and  Infiniti models. Progressive wear can shed metal, harm the engine, and cut motive power. A Nissan Recall Check confirms if your Nissan needs inspection and repair.

Quarter Glass Detachment

A Quarter glass detachment on the 2024 Murano is leading to a Nissan recall. An incorrect primer weakened the urethane bond, so the left/right quarter glass can separate while driving. Warning signs include wind or rattling noise. Dealers replace both panels free.

Airbag Issues

Passenger OCS Issues


A fault in the Passenger Occupant Classification System (OCS) can mark an occupied front seat as child or empty, preventing airbag deployment. Covered vehicles include Altima 2013–2016, Sentra 2013–2016, Pathfinder 2013–2016, Rogue 2014–2017, Maxima 2016, Murano 2015–2016, LEAF 2013–2016, NV200 and NV200 Taxi 2013–2016, Infiniti Q50 2014–2017, and QX60


Takata Airbag


NHTSA issued a Do Not Drive alert tied to the Nissan Recall of Takata airbags. Inflators may rupture because of age and heat, causing life-threatening shrapnel. Covered vehicles include 2002–2006 Sentra, 2002–2004 Pathfinder, and 2002–2003 Infiniti QX4.

Other Notable Mechanical Issues

Door Latch-lock Cable Defects


Nissan issued a recall for certain 2015-2017 Altima models due to improperly routed rear door latch-lock cables that can be misrouted and rub the window regulator. Lowering a rear window may unlatch the door, and it can open while moving. Nissan revised the repair to secure routing with a clip.

Rear-View Monitor Blank Screen

In May 2025, Nissan recalls over 79,000 of certain 2025 Frontier and 2025 Kicks due to the rear-view monitor showing a blank screen in reverse. A software logic error in the center display triggers a communication failure with the infotainment unit.

Camera Harness Damage

A Nissan Recall addressed camera harness damage that can blur, distort, or erase the rear-view image. Repeated vibration and manual hatch use may loosen the connector. The covered vehicles include the 2019–2021 Altima and 2020–2021 Sentra. Verify with a Nissan Recall Check and arrange the free remedy.

Understanding the Nissan Recall Process

The NHTSA begins the recall process by investigating reported issues. If a defect is found, the manufacturer must issue a recall. See the steps of their process below.

1. Report the Problem

Filing a complaint is the first action you should take. Once submitted, your report is stored in the NHTSA database. When multiple owners report similar issues with the same vehicle, it can indicate a safety defect and may trigger an official investigation.

2. Investigation

Once a complaint is submitted, the NHTSA follows a multi-step process to determine whether a recall is necessary.

  • Screening: Complaints from Nissan owners are examined for credibility and evidence to decide if further investigation is justified
  • Analysis: Defect petitions are reviewed in detail. If denied, the decision and reasoning are publicly posted in the Federal Register.
  • Investigate the Issues: NHTSA examines reports about Nissan vehicles. Findings lead to either “no defect” or a safety recall.
  • Recall Management: NHTSA ensures Nissan alerts owners, provides free remedies through dealers, and reports repair completion rates until the risk is addressed.

3. Recalls

If a Nissan part or system is unsafe or non-compliant, a recall is launched. You’ll receive notice with the next steps, and an authorized dealer will provide the free fix. Solutions can include repair or replacement, and in limited situations, refunds or buybacks to ensure your vehicle meets safety standards.

How Nissan Vehicle Recalls Are Handled

In a Nissan safety recall, three teams protect you: Nissan finds and fixes the defect, the NHTSA oversees the process and standards, and you check your VIN, respond to notices, and get the free repair to keep your vehicle safe. Below is the breakdown of how Nissan vehicle recalls are handled.

Manufacturer’s Role


Nissan investigates issues, decides on the remedy, and coordinates with NHTSA. contacts owners directly, and provides a no-cost remedy at authorized dealers. It stocks parts, issues repair instructions, and supports scheduling so fixes happen quickly across any affected model year.

NHTSA’s Role


NHTSA’s role in a Nissan Recall is to review complaints, test vehicles, and open defect investigations. If a safety defect exists, Nissan must recall and fix it for free. NHTSA then ensures notices go out, repairs are safe, free, and effective, and completion is tracked.

Your Role as the Vehicle Owner


As an owner, you help start and finish a Nissan Recall. Report safety problems to NHTSA, watch for mailed or digital notices, and use the VIN lookup to confirm status. If your Nissan shows an open recall, schedule the no-cost fix at an authorized dealer and keep proof.

Get Nissan Window Sticker by VIN

Get even more information with a Nissan Window Sticker by VIN! In one label, see the original MSRP, factory options and packages, trim, paint and interior colors, safety and driver-assist features, fuel economy, warranty details, and equipment codes. Compare the factory build to the car today, confirm value, and spot missing or non-original parts before you buy or list.

Ford window sticker

Why Use Detailed Vehicle History to Check Nissan Recall?

We don’t stop at open recalls. Enter your VIN or license plate to see recall status, affected parts, announcement dates, and the remedy step, alongside title status, theft records, liens, ownership history, odometer readings, accident and damage records, and more. 

Our goal is simple: protect your money and your time with data you can trust, presented clearly enough for anyone to use.

FAQ about Nissan Recall Check

Q. Is It Safe To Drive My Nissan If It Has An Open Recall?

Yes, you may drive only if the recall notice says it’s safe until repaired. Some recalls escalate to Do Not Drive because the risk is immediate (e.g., Takata airbags). Always run a Nissan VIN check, read the notice closely, and book the free dealer remedy right away.

Q. Are Nissan Recall Repairs Free At The Dealer?

Yes. Nissan Recall repairs are free at authorized dealers. Federal law requires a no-cost remedy for safety recalls, and NHTSA monitors compliance.

Q. Do Nissan Recalls Affect Warranty?

No. A Nissan Recall is separate from your warranty. Safety-recall repairs are free at authorized dealers, regardless of warranty status, and NHTSA monitors that remedies are safe and effective.

Q. How Long Will A Nissan Recall Repair Take?

Most Nissan Recall repairs take 1–2 hours (software updates, many airbag fixes). Complex work or back-ordered parts can take days, or rarely, weeks, depending on the availability of inventory and shipping.

Q. Will Nissan Provide Towing, Mobile Service, Or A Loaner For Recall Repairs?

Nissan Recall remedies are free, but towing/loaners/mobile service depend on the specific recall and dealer. Your letter or VIN lookup will state what’s covered. When in doubt, ask Nissan Consumer Affairs.

Q. What Should I Do If A Nissan Recall Has No Remedy Yet Or Parts Are Back-ordered?

Follow the recall notice, limit use if advised, and check your VIN regularly for updates. Stay in touch with your Nissan dealer about parts ETA and scheduling. NHTSA’s VIN tool shows when a fix becomes available.

Q. Can Multiple Nissan Recalls Be Handled In One Visit?

Often yes. Check your VIN, list every open recall when scheduling, and ask the dealer to pre-order parts so work can be done together.

Q. How Do I Get Reimbursed If I Already Paid For A Repair That Becomes a Nissan Recall?

If a repair you paid for becomes a Nissan Recall, you may get reimbursed. Follow these steps below to get reimbursement:

  1. Step: Confirm the defect match via VIN. 
  2. Step: Compile invoices and payments. 
  3. Step: File with Nissan Consumer Affairs and track your case until resolved.

Q. Does A Salvage Or Rebuilt-title Nissan Still Qualify For Recall Repairs?

Usually, yes, but confirm first. Safety recalls are intended to be repaired at no cost, although some dealers may decline to branded-title vehicles if the car is unsafe to work on or heavily modified.

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