Tesla Will Recall Cybertruck in Latest Setback

A federal auto safety agency said the accelerator pedal on the pickup truck, sales of which began in late 2023, could become stuck, increasing the risk of accidents.

Tesla has agreed to recall nearly 4,000 of its Cybertruck pickups to fix an accelerator pedal that can get stuck, raising the risk of crashes, a federal safety agency said on Friday.

The defect could cause the vehicle to accelerate unintentionally, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said in a notice posted on its website. Tesla started selling the Cybertruck, its first pickup truck, in November after many delays.

The recall is yet another setback for Tesla, the largest electric vehicle manufacturer in the United States. The company has been losing market share to emerging competitors and reported this month that its sales in the first three months of the year fell from the same period a year earlier — the first time that has happened since the start of the pandemic.

Tesla’s recent troubles have unnerved investors, and the company’s stock has fallen roughly 40 percent so far this year.

The federal safety agency said all 3,878 Cybertrucks on U.S. roads produced from Nov. 13 to April 4 have the defect, which it said was caused by soap being used as lubricant during assembly at Tesla’s factory in Austin, Texas. The residual soap “reduced the retention of the pad to the pedal,” the agency said.

Tesla first received a customer complaint on March 31, and by last Friday it had completed its assessment and voluntarily recalled the affected vehicles, the notice said.


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