Speed Control safety issues in 2024 model year vehicles: 33 complaints across 8 makes. See which 2024 vehicles have the worst speed control problems.
Speed Control failures across 2024 model year vehicles have been reported to NHTSA by owners and safety investigators. These reports help identify patterns in component failures that may affect vehicle safety. Below are the 2024 vehicles most affected by speed control problems.
| Vehicle | Complaints |
|---|---|
| Toyota Prius | 1 |
| Toyota Grand Highlander | 9 |
| Nissan Versa | 4 |
| Nissan Murano | 1 |
| Jeep Gladiator | 1 |
| Hyundai Tucson | 5 |
| Gmc Hummer Ev Suv | 1 |
| Ford Expedition | 5 |
| Bmw Ix | 1 |
| Bmw I4 | 3 |
| Acura Mdx | 2 |
Vehicle speed control covers cruise control, adaptive cruise control, and the throttle-control systems that manage acceleration response to driver input. Reports include unintended acceleration events, cruise-control failures to disengage on brake application, adaptive-cruise system disengagement at speed, and throttle-pedal sticking. Unintended acceleration is among the most dangerous failure modes a vehicle can exhibit and has been the subject of multiple high-profile recalls. Cruise-control failures to disengage can produce situations the driver cannot recover from.
Any incident where the throttle does not respond as expected, where cruise control behaves unexpectedly, or where the vehicle accelerates without driver input should be reported immediately to NHTSA and the dealer.
With 33 2024 speed control complaints reported across 11 models spanning 2024–2024, this combination falls into a moderate signal band. In practice, that means the volume is significant enough to warrant attention but not yet at the threshold that typically triggers regulator-led investigations. Complaint volume is not the only thing that matters — severity (whether the defect caused crashes, fires, or injuries) and consistency (whether multiple owners describe the same failure mode) are equally important when assessing real-world risk.
If your vehicle is exhibiting 2024 speed control issues that match the patterns described in NHTSA complaints, take these steps in order. First, check your VIN for active recalls using NHTSA's free recall lookup tool — recall remedies are repaired at no cost to the owner regardless of warranty status. Second, document the failure with dated photos or video, and keep copies of any service records, parts replacements, or dealer communications related to the issue. Third, file a complaint with NHTSA at nhtsa.gov/recalls — every complaint contributes to the pattern recognition that triggers investigations and, ultimately, recalls. The complaint should describe what happened, when, the vehicle's mileage at the time, and whether anyone was injured. Fourth, if the issue presents an immediate safety hazard (loss of braking, steering, throttle control, fire, or unintended airbag deployment), discontinue driving and have the vehicle towed to a qualified repair facility rather than risking a crash to reach a dealer.
The data on this page is drawn from three distinct NHTSA sources that owners frequently confuse. Complaints are reports submitted by individual vehicle owners describing a problem they experienced — they are unverified narratives, but in aggregate they reveal patterns. Recalls are formal manufacturer-initiated campaigns to repair a confirmed safety defect on a specified set of VINs; the manufacturer pays for the repair and is required to notify affected owners by mail. Investigations are NHTSA-led inquiries that often start when complaint volume crosses a threshold for a particular component or model — they may conclude with a manufacturer-issued recall, a finding of no defect, or remain open while data accumulates. A high complaint count without a corresponding recall does not mean the issue is unimportant; it sometimes means an investigation is ongoing or that NHTSA has not yet acted. Conversely, a small recall on a low-complaint model means the defect is severe enough that the manufacturer chose to remediate proactively.
This page aggregates 2024 speed control safety records published by the U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA). Records are matched to make, model, and year using NHTSA's classifications, and complaint counts are deduplicated by ODI number. The dataset includes consumer complaints, manufacturer-issued recalls, Technical Service Bulletins, and crash investigations. Most recent record on this page was updated on 2026-03-28. Counts on this page reflect what is currently in our database; we do not include records flagged as duplicate, withdrawn, or outside the model-year window.
NHTSA's database currently shows 33 2024 speed control complaints across 11 distinct models spanning 2024–2024. Complaint counts grow continuously as new owner reports are filed and processed.
Among the records on this page, the 2024 model year accounts for the highest speed control complaint volume (33 reports). A concentration in a single year often indicates a generation-specific defect; concentrations across consecutive years can suggest an ongoing supplier or design issue.
Recall status varies by VIN. Even when complaint volumes are high, recalls are issued per-defect, not per-component, so some 2024 speed control complaints lead to recalls while others remain unaddressed. Check your specific VIN against NHTSA's recall lookup or browse the recall pages linked from each vehicle profile to see which campaigns apply.
Complaints are unverified owner reports; recalls are formal manufacturer campaigns to repair confirmed defects on specified VINs at no cost to the owner. Complaints often come first and, when patterns emerge, can prompt investigations that lead to recalls. A high complaint count on a vehicle without a recall does not mean the issue is benign — it sometimes means investigation or remedy is still in progress.
It depends on (1) whether the issue is covered by an active recall and the recall has been performed, (2) the severity of the failure modes reported, and (3) whether the specific VIN has a documented service history showing the relevant repairs. A used-vehicle inspection by a qualified mechanic, plus a VIN check against NHTSA's recall database, are the practical minimum steps before purchase.
Submit safety complaints directly to NHTSA at nhtsa.gov/recalls — there is no fee, and you do not need to be the original owner. Include the VIN, model year, mileage at time of incident, a description of what happened, and whether anyone was injured. Each complaint contributes to the pattern recognition NHTSA uses to decide whether to open an investigation.