Ford Motor Co. (F) is dealing with another round of vehicle recalls, this time affecting roughly 250,000 cars with problems ranging from faulty instrument panels to battery issues that could lead to fires.
Quarter-Million Vehicles Affected by Latest Recalls
The Detroit automaker reported two separate recalls to the NHTSA on Tuesday. The larger of the two involves 229,609 units of the 2025-2026 Bronco and Bronco Sport models, where instrument panels may fail to display critical information including warning lights and vehicle speed. You can see why that's problematic—driving without knowing your speed or seeing warning indicators is basically an invitation for trouble.
The second recall covers 20,558 Ford Escape (2020-2024) and Lincoln Corsair (2021-2024) plug-in hybrid vehicles. These models have a more serious issue: a manufacturing defect in the high voltage battery cells that could trigger an internal short circuit and battery failure, according to NHTSA documents. In plain English, that means potential fire risk.
These latest recalls push Ford's 2025 total to 137, based on Department of Transportation data. That's a lot of do-overs for one year.
Farley Calls Recalls Ford's "Largest Near-Term Opportunity"
Here's where things get interesting. Ford CEO Jim Farley has publicly called the company's recall situation the automaker's biggest near-term opportunity. It's an unusual way to frame what many would consider a quality control problem, but Farley's point seems to be that addressing these issues head-on could strengthen the business long-term.
The ongoing cascade of recalls does raise legitimate questions about what's happening during Ford's production process. When you're issuing 137 recalls in a single year, something's clearly not working as intended on the manufacturing side.
But Farley also highlighted a complicating factor: Ford is struggling to find enough skilled technicians to actually fix the problems. The company currently has more than 5,000 open positions for skilled technicians at its service centers, jobs that pay around $120,000 per year. That's solid money for skilled trade work, yet the positions remain unfilled.
The labor shortage is tangible across Ford's dealership network. Farley noted that the automaker has approximately 6,000 empty service bays sitting idle at Ford dealerships across the United States simply because there aren't enough qualified technicians to staff them. You can issue all the recalls you want, but if there's nobody available to perform the actual repair work, customers are stuck waiting.
Price Action: Ford shares rose 0.31% to $12.94 during pre-market trading on Tuesday.