Recall 14V632 covers 10,390 2014 Grand Caravan, Wrangler, and Town And Country vehicles for TPMS software errors. Reprogramming is free at franchised Dodge dealers.
Dodge is recalling 10,390 2014 Grand Caravan, Wrangler, and Town And Country vehicles under recall 14V632 because a software error can keep the tire pressure monitoring system from learning sensor locations while driving. A false TPMS warning can hide a real low tire condition, which can cause tire failure and increase the risk of a crash; Dodge dealers will complete the repair free of charge once it is available.
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What's wrong?
The tire pressure monitoring system on the 2014 Grand Caravan, Wrangler, and Town And Country watches the air pressure at each wheel through small sensors inside the wheels. Its normal job is to identify where each sensor is located and warn the driver when a tire loses pressure.
On affected vehicles, a software error stops the system from learning the locations of the individual sensors during driving. The warning light turns on even when the tire pressures are within specification. Because the system has not learned the sensor locations correctly, a later pressure loss is not reported to the driver.
There is no warning sign before failure. An owner sees the low tire pressure light, but the source problem is inside the monitoring software, not a tire that is already low.
Who's affected?
All included models share the same tire-pressure monitoring system component.
| 2014 Dodge Grand Caravan | tire |
|---|---|
| 2014 Jeep Wrangler | tire |
| 2014 Chrysler Town And Country | tire |
| Units affected | 10,390 |
A matching year and model does not guarantee inclusion. Check your VIN to confirm whether this recall applies to your specific vehicle.
What's the safety risk?
A TPMS fault that keeps sensors from being located can hide a real low tire pressure condition. Low pressure can lead to tire failure and raise the risk of a crash. If the TPMS light stays on, check tire pressure manually and schedule service. Repair will be free at any franchised Dodge dealer once available.
What should I do?
- Check your VIN to confirm your 2014 Dodge Grand Caravan, Wrangler, or Town And Country is included in this recall.
- Contact a franchised Dodge dealer and ask whether the TPMS module reprogramming is open for your VIN.
- Reference recall number 14V632 when you call so the service desk can find the campaign quickly.
- Bring the recall notice if you have it, and ask the dealer to reprogram the TPMS module so the system can identify the tire-pressure sensors correctly.
- Watch the tire-pressure warning light until the repair is complete, and check tire pressure manually if the light stays on.
What happens at the repair
At the dealer, a Dodge technician reprograms the TPMS module so the system can learn each tire pressure sensor location correctly. The recall repair is free, including the software work and related labor. This repair addresses the TPMS software error described in campaign 14V632, where the low tire pressure warning light illuminates even when tire pressure is within specification and does not alert the driver when a tire loses air pressure.
Timeline
| October 8, 2014 | NHTSA published the recall |
|---|---|
| October 23, 2014 | Owner notification mailed |
Frequently asked questions
What is recall 14V632?
Recall 14V632 covers 10,390 2014 Dodge Grand Caravan, Jeep Wrangler, and Chrysler Town And Country vehicles with TPMS software that fails to learn sensor locations while driving. The warning light stays on, which hides a real low-tire-pressure condition. Dealers reprogram the TPMS module for free.
What should I do if my 2014 Dodge Grand Caravan, Jeep Wrangler, or Chrysler Town And Country is on this recall?
Check your VIN to confirm your specific vehicle is included in recall 14V632. If it is, contact a franchised dealer to schedule the TPMS module reprogramming. Reference recall number 14V632 and Chrysler recall number P63 when you call. The repair is free.
Is the recall repair free?
Yes. Federal recall law requires the manufacturer to fix the defect at no cost. For recall 14V632, dealers reprogram the TPMS module free of charge, including parts and labor for the recall repair.
What is the safety risk?
The risk is that a stuck TPMS warning light hides a real low-tire-pressure condition. If a tire loses air pressure and the driver is not notified, the tire can fail and increase crash risk. The free dealer repair corrects the TPMS software.
What warning signs should I watch for?
The warning sign is a low tire pressure light that stays on even when the tire pressures are within specification. That light does not confirm this recall by itself. Check your VIN, then schedule the free TPMS module reprogramming if your vehicle is included.
More information
| NHTSA campaign page | nhtsa.gov/vehicle-recalls/14V632000 |
|---|---|
| Dodge customer service | 1-800-853-1403 |
| NHTSA recall # | 14V632 |
| NHTSA recall # (full) | 14V632000 |
Source documents
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Download Recall Document (PDF) (PDF)
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Download Recall Investigation Document (PDF) (PDF)
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Download Recall Document (PDF) (PDF)
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Download Owner Notification Letter (PDF)
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Download Quarterly Report (PDF)
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Download Defect / Noncompliance Notice (PDF) (PDF)
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Download Recall Acknowledgement (PDF)
This article is generated from NHTSA's primary recall filings and reviewed against the source on June 1, 2026. RecallNotify does not paraphrase NHTSA's consequence language; that text is reproduced as written above. Editorial standards →