Nissan Recalls 3,788 New Leaf EVs After a Child Seat Belt Test Failure

2026 Nissan LEAF
Image courtesy Nissasn
2026 Nissan LEAF
Image courtesy Nissasn

Nissan is recalling 3,788 of its 2026 Leaf EVs after Consumer Reports’ own testers found the rear seat belt could fail to hold an infant car seat base in place. Owners are receiving notification letters starting today, July 17, and the automaker expects a permanent fix to reach dealers this winter. In the meantime, parents and caregivers driving an affected Leaf have a specific workaround to use tonight, not just a promise of a future repair.

The defect is unusual: it was not flagged by a field complaint or a crash report at all. Consumer Reports’ engineers caught it in a routine rear-seat safety evaluation on a 2026 Leaf the organization purchased for its own auto test program, one of more than 50 tests every vehicle undergoes at CR’s Auto Test Center in Colchester, Connecticut.

That distinction shapes how quickly the rest of this story unfolds. Recalls tied to a crash or a wave of owner complaints often carry months of investigation before NHTSA and an automaker agree on a fix. This one moved from a testing lab to a voluntary recall in under a week, a pace that reflects how directly Nissan’s own follow-up evaluation confirmed what Consumer Reports had already found.

What Actually Goes Wrong With the Seat Belt

The rear outer seat belts on affected Leaf models use an automatic locking retractor, a mechanism that engages differently than the seat belt system adults rely on every day. Under normal adult use, the same belt operates as an emergency locking retractor, staying loose and letting the wearer move freely until a sudden stop or impact locks it in place. Pull an ALR-equipped belt all the way out, though, and it switches modes, locking in place immediately, which is what lets a parent cinch down an infant car seat base tightly. On the affected Leaf units, that lock can suddenly loosen the moment someone tightens the belt to improve the fit, defeating the entire point of the mechanism.

Most drivers never notice the switch between these two modes. Adults almost never pull a belt all the way out in ordinary use, while parents installing a car seat do exactly that every time, which is precisely why this specific failure mode went undetected in Nissan’s own pre-production testing but surfaced almost immediately once Consumer Reports ran its dedicated child seat installation check.

Nissan says the flaw traces to a manufacturing error at a supplier and does not affect how the belt functions for adult passengers, and it does not touch the Lower Anchors and Tethers for Children system at all. After Consumer Reports shared its findings, Nissan ran its own evaluation and confirmed that some seat belt assemblies did not meet federal motor vehicle safety standards for car seat installation, which triggered a voluntary safety recall rather than a NHTSA-ordered one.

What Owners Should Do Right Now

Emily Thomas, associate director of auto safety at Consumer Reports, recommends two immediate workarounds for parents installing an infant seat base in an affected Leaf: switch to a lower anchor, or LATCH, installation instead of the vehicle belt, or move the seat to the center rear position and secure it there with the vehicle’s belt system. Neither requires a dealer visit or any special part, and both sidestep the specific ALR flaw entirely.

Owners can confirm whether their specific vehicle is included by entering their VIN at nhtsa.gov/recalls or by calling Nissan directly at 800-647-7261. The recall covers 2026 Leaf units built between June 10, 2025, and June 8, 2026, so not every Leaf on the road is affected, and confirming the VIN before assuming the worst is worth the two minutes it takes. Grandparents, babysitters and anyone else who regularly installs a car seat in a family’s Leaf should hear about the interim workaround directly too, rather than assuming the vehicle’s primary driver has already passed the information along.

The Recall Timeline From Here

Nissan is sending owners two separate notices. The first, arriving now, alerts affected owners to the defect and the interim workaround. The second will follow once the permanent fix is ready at dealerships, which Nissan has targeted for this winter. Until that second letter arrives, there is no dealer repair to schedule, only the interim seating workaround. Owners who set a calendar reminder to check back with Nissan in a few months, rather than waiting passively for a second letter, can often get on a dealer’s schedule closer to the front of the line once parts become available.

The recall carries two reference numbers worth writing down before calling Nissan or a dealer: NHTSA’s campaign number is 26V425, and Nissan’s own internal number is R26A7. Nissan has stated it is not aware of any crashes or injuries connected to the defect as of this recall’s announcement.

This recall lands in a year that has already produced more than 300 separate vehicle safety recalls across the industry, spanning brands from Ford and Jeep to Toyota, Kia and Subaru. Most of those campaigns trace back to owner complaints, crash data or supplier defects discovered well after vehicles reached driveways. A recall sourced directly from an independent tester’s own purchase and evaluation remains the exception rather than the rule, even in a year with this much recall activity across the market.

A Recall Born From Testing, Not Complaints

Most vehicle recalls begin after owners report a problem or after a crash draws regulatory attention. This one is part of a smaller, rarer category: a defect an independent tester caught before it produced a real-world injury. Consumer Reports assigns every vehicle it evaluates a safety verdict score covering both crash prevention and crash protection, alongside its broader reliability and road test scoring, and child seat compatibility is one of the specific checks built into that process.

For families cross-shopping a new EV, the episode is a reminder that a vehicle’s official crash ratings do not always capture every safety detail a parent needs. Car seat installation quirks, like a retractor that unlocks under tension, rarely show up in a five-star federal crash rating, which tests structural crashworthiness rather than how a specific child seat interacts with a specific belt design. Reading a model’s dedicated car seat compatibility notes, not just its overall safety score, remains the more reliable way to catch this kind of issue before it reaches a driveway.

Consumer Reports maintains a searchable car seat compatibility database covering the Leaf and hundreds of other current models, built from the same hands-on installation testing that caught this specific flaw. Checking a target vehicle against that database before a purchase, rather than after bringing a new car seat home, catches fit and retractor issues that a federal five-star rating was never designed to flag in the first place.

With 3,788 vehicles affected out of a far larger 2026 Leaf production run, this recall is small by industry standards. What stands out here is not the count but the category: a defect that specifically threatens the safety of the smallest, most vulnerable passengers, caught before it became a crash statistic rather than after.

Parents shopping for a 2026 Leaf on a dealer lot right now should ask specifically whether the vehicle on the lot falls inside the affected production window, as new inventory could still include recalled units awaiting the fix. A dealer can check the VIN on the spot, and asking before signing paperwork costs nothing.

Car seat technicians certified through Safe Kids Worldwide often recommend a broader habit for any new vehicle purchase, EV or otherwise: install and test the specific car seat model a family plans to use before driving the vehicle off the lot, rather than assuming compatibility based on the automaker’s general specifications. The Leaf recall is a reminder of exactly why that extra step exists.


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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