The Recall Desk
HighNHTSA·24V180000·Announced 2024-07-03

2025 International LT vehicles recalled for reversed turn signal wiring

Navistar is recalling certain 2025 International LT vehicles because two wires in the taillight jumper harness may be reversed, causing turn signals to activate in the wrong direction. This safety defect may confuse other road users and increase crash risk.

What this means for you

Real risk of harm even if no illness or injury has been reported yet. Stop using the product and follow the agency's guidance.

Our severity reasoning: The recall involves a safety-critical vehicle function (turn signals) that creates risk of harm through potential driver confusion and increased crash risk. However, no injuries or deaths have been reported. Per the severity rubric, risk-of-harm products without reported injury are classified as High.

Plain-English summary

Certain 2025 International LT vehicles have a defect in the taillight jumper harness where two wires may be reversed. This causes the turn signal to activate in the opposite direction from what the driver intended, failing to comply with Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard number 108.

Turn signals that do not function as intended may confuse other road users, creating an increased risk of a crash.

Navistar is recalling approximately 38 of these vehicles. Owner notification letters were mailed on April 15, 2024.

Owners should contact Navistar customer service at 1-800-448-7825 to have the taillight jumper harness replaced at no charge. For more information, owners can contact NHTSA's Vehicle Safety Hotline at 1-888-327-4236 (TTY 1-800-424-9153) or visit www.nhtsa.gov.

The recalled product

Product
2025 INTERNATIONAL LT
Brand
INTERNATIONAL
Manufacturer
Navistar, Inc.
Category
Vehicle
Hazard
  • turn-signal-malfunction
  • wiring-defect
Affected units
38

Is your product affected?

Check your packaging against the codes below. If any of them match, the product is part of this recall.

Model numbers (1)

  • LT

Distribution

Distributed nationwide across the United States.