Home/ Recalls/ Toyota/ 24V419
Campaign 24V419 Posted June 6, 2024 4,869 units

2022-2024 Toyota Highlander Recall 24V419: Tire Load Rating

Recall 24V419 affects 4,869 2022-2024 Toyota Highlander vehicles with Blackout Package tires that have insufficient load ratings. Repair is free at any franchised Toyota dealer.

Toyota is recalling 4,869 2022-2024 Highlander L and LE vehicles with the Blackout Package because the installed tires have an insufficient load rating. Tires that are overloaded can fail and increase crash risk, and Toyota dealers will complete the recall repair free of charge.

Does this recall apply to your specific vehicle?

The official, free per-VIN recall check is run by NHTSA. Enter your VIN and we'll forward you directly — and add you to a free watchlist so you hear about new recalls for your vehicle.

Check my VIN at NHTSA

RecallNotify doesn't check your VIN — NHTSA's official tool does. We use your email only to alert you to new recalls.

What's wrong?

The 20-inch tires on affected 2022-2024 Toyota Highlander L and LE SUVs are part of the Blackout Package wheel upgrade. Each tire has a load rating, which is the amount of weight the tire is rated to carry while supporting the vehicle, passengers, cargo, and road forces.

On these Highlanders, Gulf States Toyota selected tires that matched the Highlander Platinum grade instead of the L and LE grade requirements. The L and LE grades have a higher gross axle weight rating, so the installed tires do not meet the required load rating for those vehicles. That means the tires are not rated for the weight capacity Toyota specified for the affected SUVs.

The filing does not describe a special warning before the load-rating problem itself. If tire pressure drops below the tire pressure warning system threshold, the driver will see a warning light.

Who's affected?

All three model years share the same gloss black 20-inch tire assembly listed in the recall scope.

2023 Toyota Highlander tire
2022 Toyota Highlander tire
2024 Toyota Highlander tire
Units affected4,869
Field incidentsNHTSA has logged no field incidents to date.

The year and model narrow the scope, but the VIN decides. Check your VIN to confirm whether your specific SUV is included.

What's the safety risk?

A tire with too little load capacity can be overloaded, fail, and increase crash risk. If the tire pressure warning light comes on, slow down, find a safe place to stop, and arrange service before continuing normal driving. Toyota will inspect the tires, replace them as needed, and update the tire information label. Repair is free at any franchised Toyota dealer.

What should I do?

  1. Check your VIN to confirm your 2022-2024 Toyota Highlander is included in this recall.
  2. Contact a franchised Toyota dealer to schedule the free tire inspection, tire replacement if needed, and tire information label update that corrects the insufficient load-rating issue.
  3. Bring the recall notice if Toyota has mailed one. If not, reference recall number 24V419 when you call.
  4. Avoid overloading the vehicle until the dealer confirms the tires and tire information label are correct.
  5. Call Toyota customer service at 1-800-444-1074 with questions about recall number 24V419.

What happens at the repair

At the dealer, a Toyota technician inspects the tires and replaces any tires that do not meet the required load rating. The technician also installs a corrected tire information label when the label needs replacement. Parts and labor are covered, and the recall repair is free. Toyota's general reimbursement plan is on file for owners who already paid for a tire or tire-label repair tied to this recall. Bring repair invoices and payment documentation to the service desk, or contact GST customer service to ask how to submit the claim.

ReimbursementReimbursement available

Timeline

June 6, 2024 NHTSA published the recall
June 10, 2024 Dealer notification began
June 10, 2024 Dealer notification ended
July 29, 2024 VIN-searchable in NHTSA's database Check your VIN to see whether this recall applies to your specific vehicle.
July 29, 2024 Interim owner notification (was planned for this date)
August 8, 2024 Owner notification mailed

Frequently asked questions

What is recall 24V419?

Recall 24V419 covers 4,869 2022-2024 Toyota Highlander L and Highlander LE vehicles with the Blackout Package. The installed tires have an insufficient load rating and fail to meet Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard 110. GST will inspect and replace tires as needed for free.

What should I do if my 2022-2024 Toyota Highlander is on this recall?

Check your VIN to confirm your specific Highlander is included in recall 24V419. If it is, contact a franchised Toyota dealer to schedule the tire inspection, tire replacement if needed, and tire information label replacement if needed. Reference GST recall number 24R1 when you call.

Is the recall repair free?

Yes. Federal recall law requires the recall repair at no cost, and GST will inspect and replace the tires as necessary for free. The dealer will also install a new tire information label as necessary at no charge.

What is the safety risk?

The safety risk is tire overload and failure. Tires with an insufficient load rating can be overloaded during normal use, which increases the risk of a crash. The repair path is clear: have a Toyota dealer inspect the tires and replace them as needed for free.

When were owners notified about this Toyota Highlander recall?

GST mailed owner notification letters on August 8, 2024. If you bought the Highlander used or never received the letter, the VIN still decides whether this recall applies. You can also contact GST customer service at 1-800-444-1074.

More information

NHTSA campaign pagenhtsa.gov/vehicle-recalls/24V419000
Toyota customer service1-800-444-1074
NHTSA recall #24V419
NHTSA recall # (full)24V419000

Source documents

This article is generated from NHTSA's primary recall filings and reviewed against the source on May 20, 2026. RecallNotify does not paraphrase NHTSA's consequence language; that text is reproduced as written above. Editorial standards →