Ford Recalls 42,784 Mustang Mach-E EVs Over a Rollaway Risk From a Cracked Differential

A GM electric vehicle using bidirectional charging to power a home
A GM electric vehicle using bidirectional charging to power a home

Ford is recalling more than 42,700 Mustang Mach-E electric SUVs over a part that sends power to the rear wheels and can crack and snap, leaving drivers stranded or, in rare cases, letting the vehicle roll on its own. The recall covers certain 2021, 2022 and 2023 model-year Mach-Es built with a rear-wheel-drive layout, and owners should expect a letter in the mail within days.

The automaker filed paperwork with the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration on July 7 confirming that 42,784 vehicles in the United States carry a rear differential pinion shaft that may fracture from bending fatigue. That shaft is the piece of hardware that takes power from the electric motor and delivers it to the wheels. When it fails, two things can happen: the car simply stops moving, or, if the driver has left the vehicle in Park without setting the parking brake, the Mach-E can roll away unattended.

What Went Wrong Inside the Rear Differential

Every vehicle swept into this recall shares one trait: a rear-wheel-drive setup with no front motor to keep the car moving if the rear differential lets go. Ford has not pinned down why the pinion shaft cracks. The company first noticed the pattern on a 2023 Mach-E sold in Europe, opened an internal investigation, and has now logged 82 reports of the failure worldwide. Ford says it has not received any reports of crashes, injuries or fires tied to the defect in the United States, but the risk of unintended movement is serious enough that regulators classified it as a safety recall rather than a service bulletin.

Ford estimates the defect could be present in the full recalled population, though it has not finished determining the root cause. The affected cars were not built in a single continuous run of vehicle identification numbers, so the company is telling every owner of an eligible 2021-2023 rear-wheel-drive Mach-E to get their car checked rather than trying to narrow the list further.

Timeline: What Happens and When

Ford notified its dealers about the recall on July 1. Interim letters explaining the risk began going out to owners on July 13, but there is a catch: Ford does not yet have a permanent fix ready. The company expects to finalize the repair and start sending a second round of letters in December 2026, at which point dealers will either repair or replace the rear differential assembly and install a more durable pinion shaft. Until then, affected owners can still drive their Mach-E, but Ford is urging them to always engage the parking brake when parked, above all on an incline, where the scenario is most likely to lead to unintended rollaway.

The gap between the warning letter and the actual fix is not unusual for a defect this complex. Automakers sometimes issue an interim recall notice to get safety information into owners’ hands quickly, even before engineers finish validating a permanent repair. Ford’s messaging is clear that the July letter is a heads-up, not a repair appointment.

How to Check if Your Mustang Mach-E Is Affected

Owners can find out immediately whether their car is included by entering their 17-digit vehicle identification number at nhtsa.gov/recalls or by calling the NHTSA Vehicle Safety Hotline at 1-888-327-4236. Ford has also set up a dedicated line for this specific recall, 26S50, reachable at 1-866-436-7332. The VIN is printed on the driver-side dashboard, visible through the windshield, and also appears on the vehicle registration and insurance card.

Once notified, owners do not need to pay anything out of pocket. Ford is covering the inspection and eventual repair or replacement of the rear differential assembly at no cost, regardless of whether the vehicle is still under warranty. Dealers will handle the work once the December remedy becomes available, and owners who received the interim letter do not need to take any action beyond watching for the follow-up notice and practicing the parking brake habit in the meantime.

Why Rear Differential Failures Draw Extra Scrutiny

A pinion shaft fracture is treated differently from cosmetic or convenience recalls, touching two separate failure modes at once: loss of propulsion, which can strand a driver in traffic or an intersection, and unintended rollaway, which can happen with nobody inside the vehicle. NHTSA has pushed automakers in recent years to treat any parking-related rollaway risk as a priority recall category, following a string of similar issues across the industry involving electronic parking systems and mechanical park mechanisms in both gas and electric vehicles.

Electric vehicles add a wrinkle that gas-powered cars generally do not have. The Mach-E’s rear motor connects to the wheels through a single-speed reduction gear and differential, rather than a multi-speed transmission with its own parking pawl, so the mechanical parking brake becomes the last line of defense if the driveline itself fails. That is precisely why Ford’s interim advice leans so heavily on setting the parking brake every time, rather than trusting Park alone to hold the car in place.

This recall lands in the middle of a demanding year for Ford’s safety and quality teams. More than 300 vehicle safety recalls have already been logged industry-wide in 2026, and Ford has filed several of the largest, including a rollaway-related campaign covering more than 741,000 trucks and SUVs with a faulty parking pawl mechanism. The Mach-E pinion shaft issue is smaller in scale but shares the same underlying concern: making sure a parked vehicle stays parked.

What This Means if You Own or Are Shopping for a Mach-E

Current owners should check their VIN now rather than waiting for the letter to arrive. Mail delivery can lag behind NHTSA’s public database by days or weeks. If your Mach-E is affected, there is no need to stop driving it, but do not skip the parking brake, especially on hills or sloped driveways, until the dealer completes the final repair.

Shoppers looking at a used 2021-2023 Mach-E should ask the seller or dealer directly whether the car has an open recall and, if so, whether the rear differential has already been inspected. Federal law does not require a private seller to disclose open recalls, and dealers in most states can legally sell a used car with an unfixed recall as long as they are not required by state law to complete it first. A quick VIN check before signing anything costs nothing and takes less than a minute.

A Rough Year for Ford’s Recall Numbers

The Mach-E campaign is one of several rollaway-related notices Ford has issued this year. In June, the company told owners of certain Bronco Sport and Maverick models to stop driving entirely over a separate suspension defect, and in July it opened a much larger recall covering 741,195 trucks and SUVs equipped with a 10R80 automatic transmission whose park pawl can wear out and let the vehicle creep even when shifted into Park. Ford has also filed recalls this year touching the Explorer, Expedition, Navigator, F-150, Focus, Mustang and Bronco Raptor, spanning everything from blank instrument clusters to fender flares that can detach at speed.

None of that means the Mach-E is unusually unreliable compared with rivals. Every major automaker files dozens of recalls a year, and NHTSA’s own count shows more than 300 safety campaigns across the industry so far in 2026. What sets a differential or driveline recall apart is the direct link to whether a parked car actually stays where a driver left it, which is why Ford is asking owners to change a habit, setting the parking brake every time, rather than simply wait for the December fix.

Where to Get Help

Owners with questions beyond the basic VIN lookup can reach Ford’s customer relationship center directly, ask their local dealer to pull up the vehicle’s open recall history, or file a complaint with NHTSA if they notice symptoms such as unusual noise from the rear axle, a sudden loss of power, or the vehicle moving after being shifted into Park. Reporting early symptoms helps regulators track whether the defect is progressing faster than Ford’s timeline anticipates, and it can also flag a car for priority repair once dealers have the final parts in hand.

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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