Honda Recalls 325,588 Odyssey Minivans Over Rearview Cameras That Fail in the Rain

Rear View Monitor for car reverse system. Rear area image showing to driver by video camera at rear area to help for parking and prevent accident.
Rear View Monitor for car reverse system. Rear area image showing to driver by video camera at rear area to help for parking and prevent accident. (image courtesy Deposit Photos)
Rear View Monitor for car reverse system. Rear area image showing to driver by video camera at rear area to help for parking and prevent accident.
Rear View Monitor for car reverse system. Rear area image showing to driver by video camera at rear area to help for parking and prevent accident. (image courtesy Deposit Photos)

Honda is telling owners of more than 325,000 Odyssey minivans that water can seep into the rearview camera and knock out the image right when they need it most: backing out of a driveway or parking spot. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration announced the recall on July 8, and it covers 325,588 Odyssey vans from the 2018 through 2020 model years.

The defect is simple to describe. Water gets into the rearview camera assembly and corrodes the internal circuit board. When that happens, the camera stops sending an image to the dashboard screen the moment the driver shifts into reverse. Honda has logged 1,648 warranty claims tied to the problem so far. The company has not reported any crashes or injuries connected to it.

What Is Actually Wrong With the Camera

The rearview camera on an Odyssey sits low on the tailgate, exposed to road spray, car washes and rain every time the van is driven. Honda’s recall filing with NHTSA says moisture can work its way into the camera housing over time. Once water reaches the circuit board, the corrosion can cause the display to go black, freeze on a static image, or show a scrambled image instead of a live feed of what is behind the vehicle.

A driver who glances at a blank or frozen screen while backing up gets no warning that something is wrong. Unlike a check-engine light or a beeping alert, a failed backup camera often only reveals itself the moment it is needed, which is why NHTSA classifies the defect as a crash risk rather than a mere inconvenience.

This is not the first time Honda has had to fix Odyssey rearview cameras. In 2023, the automaker recalled 2018-2023 Odysseys after finding that a coaxial cable connector known as a MOST cable was improperly manufactured, also causing the backup image to disappear. Honda logged 273,870 warranty claims on that repair. Fox Business reported that this new July recall “expands a previous recall, which affected certain 2019-2020 Honda Odyssey vehicles,” meaning some owners could now be dealing with their second or even third camera-related notice for the same van. Honda has also issued two other unrelated recalls in recent months: more than 880,000 vehicles for a rear suspension part prone to rust, and nearly 99,000 for a seat sensor that could trigger airbags without warning.

Why a Blank Screen Is a Federal Safety Issue

Backup cameras are not an optional convenience anymore. Starting in May 2018, every new passenger vehicle sold in the United States has been required to include one under a federal rule tied to the Cameron Gulbransen Kids Transportation Safety Act, named for a two-year-old killed when his father accidentally backed over him in a driveway. The rule set minimum requirements for the camera’s field of view and how quickly the image must appear after the vehicle shifts into reverse.

That history is part of why NHTSA treats a failed rearview camera as more than a glitch. Minivans like the Odyssey have some of the largest rear blind zones on the road: their length, high beltlines and third-row seating all block a driver’s direct view out the back window. Families buy minivans specifically to haul kids, and Odyssey owners are exactly the drivers most likely to have small children walking or playing behind the vehicle in a driveway. A dead camera on this vehicle removes a safety feature that many owners have come to rely on more than their mirrors.

Which Odysseys Are Covered and What Happens Next

The recall applies to the 2018, 2019 and 2020 model year Honda Odyssey. It does not include the redesigned Odyssey generation that debuted for 2018 in facelifted trims sold later, so owners should not assume a newer or older model year is automatically covered. The surest way to check is to run the vehicle’s 17-character VIN through the free lookup tool at nhtsa.gov/recalls or call the NHTSA Vehicle Safety Hotline at 1-888-327-4236.

Honda says owner notification letters will begin going out on August 24. Dealers will replace the entire rearview camera assembly free of charge. According to Kelley Blue Book, the replacement part will come from a different supplier, Sony, rather than Magna, which made the original camera involved in the 2023 recall. Whether that switch actually solves the water intrusion problem long-term is something only time and further complaints will tell, but it does mean this is not simply a reissue of the same part with the same design.

Owners do not need to wait for the mailed letter to act. Honda dealerships can look up a VIN and schedule the repair as soon as parts are available, and the fix costs nothing regardless of whether the original warranty has expired. Owners who paid out of pocket for a camera repair tied to this defect in the past should keep receipts, as Honda recall remedies typically include reimbursement for prior repairs of the same problem.

What To Do If You Own an Affected Odyssey

Start by checking your VIN at nhtsa.gov/recalls. If your Odyssey comes back as part of the recall, call your local Honda dealer to ask whether replacement cameras are in stock, as national recalls of this size often create temporary parts shortages. In the meantime, treat the backup camera the way drivers did before it existed: check mirrors, turn your head, and back up slowly, especially in driveways, parking lots and anywhere children might be present.

If the camera has already failed and you paid for a repair before the recall was announced, hold onto that invoice and ask Honda’s customer service line, 1-888-234-2138, about reimbursement. And if you experience a close call caused by the screen going dark unexpectedly, NHTSA encourages drivers to file a complaint directly through its website. Consumer complaints are part of what triggers investigations into whether an earlier fix actually worked.

For a vehicle built around family use, a rearview camera that can quietly stop working is the kind of defect that deserves attention even without a single reported crash. Honda’s decision to replace the part with one from a new supplier suggests the company is trying to close the door on a problem that has now surfaced in three separate recall actions across roughly the same generation of Odyssey.

A Recall That Lands at a Tough Moment for the Odyssey

The timing is not ideal for Honda’s minivan lineup. Odyssey sales fell 18 percent through the first four months of 2026 compared with the same stretch a year earlier, even as American Honda reported stronger overall results for the first half of the year. The Odyssey now faces closer competition than it has in years from the Toyota Sienna and the Kia Carnival, which posted a nearly 25 percent sales increase over the same period and has closed to within a few hundred units of Honda’s once-dominant minivan. A high-profile safety recall covering three consecutive model years does nothing to help Honda’s position in a segment where buyers increasingly cross-shop reliability records before deciding between the three vans.

None of that changes the calculation for someone who already owns an affected 2018, 2019 or 2020 Odyssey. The recall is free, the fix is available at any Honda dealer, and there is no cost or paperwork burden placed on the owner beyond scheduling the appointment. Whether the recall dents Honda’s minivan sales going forward is a separate question from whether an individual owner should get their camera checked, and the second question has a clear answer regardless of how the first one plays out.


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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