120,000 Citroen Owners Face A Year Long Recall Queue

London, England UK. 2018. Official notification letter and envelope for a UK car safety recall
London, England UK. 2018. Official notification letter and envelope for a UK car safety recall
London, England UK. 2018. Official notification letter and envelope for a UK car safety recall
London, England UK. 2018. Official notification letter and envelope for a UK car safety recall

If you own a second-generation Citroen C3, a Citroen DS3 or one of the related DS models built between 2009 and 2019, you may still be parked on the drive waiting for a dealer to call. Almost a year after Stellantis ordered 120,000 UK vehicles off the road over faulty Takata airbags, dealers are still working through a backlog so deep that some owners are being told repairs cannot be booked until 2026, with the DVSA now issuing fresh guidance to MOT testers on how to handle these cars when they roll into the bay.

The recall is one of the largest stop-drive notices ever issued in this country, and ignoring it carries consequences far beyond the safety risk. Drivers who keep using an affected car face up to £2,500 in fines, three penalty points and even a driving ban under the powers the DVSA holds for breaches of recall stop-drive orders. The recall itself is free of charge, but the practical impact on owners has been brutal. Tens of thousands of motorists are facing months without transport, in some cases more than a year, and the manufacturer’s own dealer network is buckling under the volume of work.

What The Recall Covers And Why The Airbag Is Dangerous

The recall affects second-generation Citroen C3 hatchbacks built between 2009 and 2016 and Citroen DS3 models built between 2009 and 2019, plus a wider net of Citroen C4, DS4 and DS5 vehicles brought in as the investigation widened. The fault sits in the front airbags, which were sourced from Takata, the Japanese supplier whose ammonium nitrate propellant has caused at least 28 deaths and hundreds of serious injuries worldwide.

The chemistry of the problem is straightforward and terrifying. As the airbag inflator ages, the propellant can degrade, particularly in humid or warm conditions. When the airbag eventually deploys in a crash, the inflator can rupture instead of inflating smoothly, sending sharp metal fragments into the cabin at high speed. In the worst recorded incidents the shrapnel has pierced the chest and neck of drivers and front passengers. That risk has driven the largest automotive recall campaign in history globally, and Citroen’s stop-drive notice is the UK end of it.

Stellantis issued the recorded letters to owners on 20 June 2025, instructing them to stop driving the affected cars immediately and to contact their nearest dealer to book a free airbag replacement. The fix itself is mechanical rather than complex. A service manager quoted by Car Dealer Magazine described it as “a relatively easy fix” of around 90 minutes per vehicle, but added that mechanics still have to crawl behind a hot dash in warm weather and that “the stress on the managers and technicians is relentless.”

Why Dealers Cannot Keep Up

The maths of the recall is the problem. With 120,000 UK vehicles to inspect and around 90 minutes of qualified workshop time required for each one, even a network running every bay at full capacity for a year would struggle. Citroen and DS dealers were already busy with warranty work and the spring service rush when the stop-drive letters landed. The combination produced what one dealer described to Car Dealer Magazine as “immense pressure” on their teams.

The first sign of trouble was the phone system. Once recorded letters reached owners, dealership lines effectively jammed. Customers desperate to book any slot were calling repeatedly, and dealers struggled to call other customers back to manage existing appointments. Staff started working early mornings, late evenings and weekends to dig into the backlog. Even then, the supply of replacement Takata airbags became the next pinch point. Stellantis said the replacement units were “available now” with a supply forecast through October, but dealers reported customers being booked into January and beyond as the workshop calendars filled.

A Stellantis spokesperson acknowledged the scale of the disruption: “It is inevitable, with such a large number of vehicles affected, that customers will be inconvenienced in the short term.” The same statement promised that the company was “mobilising” its dealer network and looking at “additional airbag replacement sites at convenient locations as well as repair at home options.” Almost a year on from the stop-drive order, those at-home options have begun rolling out in some regions but the bulk of the work is still being funnelled through main dealers.

The MOT Problem And The DVSA Update

Recalls and MOTs do not normally collide. An MOT tests roadworthiness on the day of the test and does not generally police outstanding manufacturer recalls. Stop-drive recalls are the exception, because by definition the vehicle is not supposed to be on the road at all. That created an awkward grey zone when owners of affected Citroens tried to keep their cars legal during the long wait for a dealer slot.

The DVSA has now issued formal guidance for MOT testers via Special Notice 03-25, replacing earlier guidance issued under Special Notice 02-25. The instruction is that when a tester sees a vehicle covered by the Citroen stop-drive recall, they must record a manual advisory on the MOT certificate stating: “This vehicle has an outstanding recall. Contact Citroen for information and to arrange a free repair.” The car can still pass the MOT itself if it meets the regular test criteria, but the advisory makes the outstanding safety issue visible on the official record and removes any ambiguity for owners and insurers.

That guidance also clarifies that MOT testers themselves should not attempt to drive affected vehicles into and out of the bay during testing, and should ask owners to position them. The aim is to protect testers from the stop-drive risk while keeping the testing system functioning. For owners, the practical impact is that the MOT will still happen but the certificate will carry a visible flag that the airbag fault has not yet been fixed.

What This Means For Insurance And Resale

An outstanding stop-drive recall has consequences that ripple well beyond the workshop wait. Insurers are entitled to ask whether a vehicle has any outstanding safety recalls when offering cover and at renewal. If the recall is open and the owner is still using the vehicle, the insurer may either decline to cover it or argue that any claim arising from the airbag fault is excluded. Anyone tempted to ignore the stop-drive notice should also consider that a serious injury caused by a known, recalled airbag would be a difficult position to defend in any subsequent civil case.

The used car market is feeling the effect too. Used Citroen C3 and DS3 listings on the major sales portals routinely note the recall status, and dealers have suspended sales of stock that has not yet been through the airbag replacement process. Private sellers are generally honest about the position but a buyer who acquires an affected car without checking the recall status could find themselves owning a vehicle they are legally barred from driving until the work is done.

What To Do If You Are Affected

The basic checklist is short but important. Enter your registration at gov.uk/check-vehicle-recalls or call the DVSA recall information line on 0117 866 8009. The system will tell you within seconds whether your car is on the stop-drive list. Citroen owners can also call the Citroen UK customer service line on 0800 093 9393 and quote their VIN to confirm the recall reference and book a repair slot.

If you can, take advantage of the home repair option. Stellantis has been rolling out mobile repair teams in regions where dealer backlogs are worst, and a number of dealers have set up satellite repair sites in shopping centre car parks and at park-and-ride facilities. These appointments are usually quicker to book than a main dealer slot and the work is identical. Ask specifically when you call about availability of home or pop-up appointments.

Do not drive the car in the meantime. The 90 minutes of inconvenience at a dealer is dwarfed by the legal and insurance risk of using the vehicle on the road. If you genuinely have no transport, talk to your dealer about a courtesy car. Citroen has confirmed it will provide loan vehicles where the wait is excessive, but the offer is not universal and owners often have to push for it. Keep a paper trail of every conversation, every booking attempt and every refusal. If the matter ever ends up at the Motor Ombudsman, that record is your best evidence.

The wait is frustrating and the dealer experience has been patchy, but the underlying point is unambiguous. Citroen’s stop-drive recall exists because a faulty Takata airbag could kill the person sitting behind the wheel. The dealer backlog is a logistics problem. The recall itself is a safety one. Get on the list, take any appointment offered, and do not drive until the work is done.


Sources:

Jarrod

Jarrod Partridge is the founder of Motoring Chronicle and an FIA accredited journalist with over 30 years of experience following motorsport and the global automotive industry. A member of the AIPS International Sports Press Association, Jarrod has covered Formula 1 races and automotive events at venues around the world, bringing first-hand insight to every race report, car review, and industry analysis he writes. His work spans the full breadth of motoring — from the latest EV launches and road car reviews to the cutting edge of motorsport competition.

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