Second Toyota Tundra Engine Failure Recall Issued Due to Thousands of Failures: Two Fixes Confirmed

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December 15, 2025
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17 comments
Second Toyota Tundra Engine Failure

Last month, a second Toyota Tundra engine failure recall was launched and we know now thousands of failing vehicles pushed the automaker to expand the first recall. 

Toyota Tundra engine failure?

Second Toyota Tundra Engine Failure
Early Toyota Tundra truck owners were hit by catastrophic engine failure. (Photo courtesy Toyota)

If you aren’t aware, the 3.4-liter V6 engine used in 2022 and 2024 Toyota Tundra, certain Lexus LX 600 and GX 550 vehicles has been under recall for engine failure.

There are two recalls actually for the V35A engines with Toyota stating bearings are failing leading to catastrophic failure due to excessive debris in the engine block.

This leftover debris from the factory aka swarf has become more of a topic as of late with outside engineers and mechanics pointing out its impact on engine failure in other brands.

First Toyota Tundra Recall

Second Toyota Tundra Engine Failure
The first Toyota Tundra engine failure recall caught people by surprise. (Photo courtesy Toyota)

The first recall, 24V-381, caught a lot of people by surprise since the Toyota Tundra was once known for its reputation for being “born from invincible” reliability.

This reputation, plus the swap from the 5.7-liter V8 to a twin-turbocharged V6 which skeptics already questioned its durability, was severely tarnished by the recall.

In total, Toyota recalled 98,568 Tundra trucks, 3,524 Lexus LX 600 SUVs (102,092) with engines built at two different plants. One in Tahara, Japan and one in Alabama, U.S.

At the time, according to NHTSA.gov recall documents, Toyota said “as of May 20, 2024, based on a diligent review of records, Toyota’s best engineering judgement is that there are 166 Toyota Field Technical Reports and 824 warranty claims on the engines in the subject vehicles that have been received from U.S. sources that relate or may relate to this condition and which were considered in the decision to submit this report.”

They couldn’t put a solid estimate on the number impacted but said it was less than 1% of the vehicles they were recalling. This is 824 warranty claims out of 102,092 total vehicles and Toyota was looking for more failures. While this may seem like a small percentage, even a single engine failure at highway speeds can create a serious safety situation, especially for drivers towing or hauling, where sudden loss of power can lead to dangerous roadside incidents and multi-vehicle crashes. Situations like this are how many pickup truck crashes begin.

Second Recall Finds More Trucks

Second Toyota Tundra Engine Failure
The second Toyota Tundra engine failure was also shocking. (Photo courtesy Toyota)

Then came the second recall on November 6, 2025 which included the 2023-2024 models and included the Lexus GX 550 for the first time.

The official numbers were: “Toyota Tundra: 113,079 Lexus LX600: 9,895 Lexus GX550 : 3,717 Total : 126,691”

Toyota stated in a NHTSA.gov recall document it found a lot more warranty claims forcing this second recall.

“As of October 29, 2025, based on a diligent review of records, Toyota’s best engineering judgement is that there are 303 Toyota Field Technical Reports and 2,604 warranty claims on the engines in the subject vehicles that have been received from U.S. sources that relate or may relate to this condition and which were considered in the decision to submit this report.”

Toyota’s Jacob Brown, Mobility Communications Manager also in charge of recalls, said this information only pertained to the second recall.

Debris and a New Robust Main Bearing 

Second Toyota Tundra Engine Failure
A new bearing and better washing procedures at both engines plants is the fix according to Toyota. (Photo courtesy Toyota)

One of the hot topics online is if you believe Toyota’s conclusion debris is causing the issue. 

Mechanics have put out various videos from dealerships to so-called engine teardown specialists debating Toyota’s conclusions on debris or design flaw. 

Interestingly, the second recall document has a rather great chronology report that reads like a detective novel on how Toyota engineers came to their conclusions.

Chronology of Principal Events: 

April – August 2025 

As a part of field monitoring efforts for recall 24V-381, Toyota observed an increase in allegations in the field of engine failures on vehicles equipped with this configuration of V35A engines that were not included in the recall. In some cases, the failures appeared to have been in a similar manner to the condition reported in recall 24V-381. 

Toyota recovered some engines related to these allegations and confirmed that some of the engines had a #1 main bearing failure in the same manner as engines covered by the 24V-381 recall. Toyota began investigating the field performance of improvements that had been implemented in production for vehicles not included in the 24V-381 recall. 

During this investigation, Toyota collected and reviewed information from both engine plants producing this configuration of the V35A engine (Tahara and Alabama). 

In Toyota’s Alabama plant, fabric swatches are used to collect daily data on the amount of contamination present in newly manufactured engines after the washing process. These swatches were compiled for later scanning and analysis. Toyota concurrently began recovering additional engines from the field that had failed, tearing down the engines, and sending the #1 main bearings to the supplier in Japan for material analysis. 

On August 27, 2025, Toyota met with NHTSA to provide information regarding the current status of its investigation. 

September – October 2025 Toyota reviewed and confirmed the implementation timing and continued adherence to manufacturing contamination improvements that occurred at the Alabama manufacturing plant. 

Two relevant production periods at the Alabama plant were identified between the production period covered by recall 24V-381 and the implementation of a design change to increase the robustness of the #1 main bearing, because the Alabama plant continued to implement additional manufacturing process improvements to reduce the potential for debris during this time. 

Toyota also reviewed the manufacturing contamination improvements at the Tahara plant after the period covered by recall 24V-381 and confirmed that the production process was generally unchanged for this period. 

In addition, Toyota conducted component testing to introduce debris pieces of various sizes to the #1 main bearing to study the robustness of the #1 main bearing for engines produced. 

To further investigate the production changes at the Alabama plant, the timing of the production change points from that plant was compared to initial results of contamination data retrieved from the fabric swatches. 

This initial comparison did not identify a correlation between production contamination variability and the engine failures seen in the market. Toyota determined that further analysis and statistical modeling of the swatch contamination data was necessary. 

Toyota also determined that collection of additional non-failed engines was necessary for a comparison to swatch contamination data, and this field recovery began. 

For the Tahara plant, the same contamination swatch data (as the Alabama plant) could not be compiled. 

Thus, in order to investigate the actual size and material of the contamination in the main bearings of engines in the field from the Tahara plant, non-failed engines were collected. 

On September 30, 2025, Toyota met with NHTSA to provide an update of its investigation and explained the status of the swatch collection and engine recovery efforts. 

Based on the analysis of the non-failed engines from the Tahara plant, it was confirmed that larger pieces of debris were present in Tahara engines from the production period after recall 24V-381. 

In addition, the debris size data obtained from periodic debris control data was compared to the bearing robustness study. Based on these analysis and studies above, the debris size was large enough that, if the debris were to be deposited in a certain manner in the #1 main bearing, engine failure could occur. 

Toyota completed its statistical analysis of the swatch contamination data collected from the Alabama plant and found engines produced during the period after those covered by the 24V381 recall, but before additional manufacturing process improvements, contained higher counts of larger pieces of debris. 

Toyota then compared the engines it recovered from this production period to the corresponding swatch data from this period and confirmed that these engines may contain higher counts of larger size contamination. These analyses showed that the subsequent period, after additional manufacturing process improvements were introduced, had lower counts of debris of these larger sizes. 

On October 22, 2025, Toyota met with NHTSA to provide an update of its investigation and explained the findings of the swatch data analysis, as well as its ongoing investigation items. 

October 31, 2025, based on the results of the above investigation, Toyota determined that during a specific production period after the 24V-381 recall, there is a possibility that higher counts of engine machining debris of a larger size may not have been cleared from the engine during manufacturing and can cause the issue described in Section 5 to occur. 

For the Alabama produced engines of this configuration, the swatch data shows the increased levels of this type of debris in the period after recall 24V-381 and before additional manufacturing process improvements were implemented. 

For the Tahara plant, data from the recovered engines, study about the bearing robustness, and the field performance data indicate that an increased level of this type of debris is present in engines produced between recall 24V-381 and the implementation of the improvement to the #1 main bearing. Thus, Toyota has decided to conduct a voluntary safety recall campaign for the above-described vehicle production period. Engines produced in the Alabama plant for vehicles after this period but before the implementation of an improved #1 main bearing remains under investigation. 

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Avatar of testerdahl
testerdahl

Administrator

2,716 messages 4,601 likes

Last month, a second Toyota Tundra engine failure recall was launched and we know now thousands of failing vehicles pushed the automaker to expand the first recall. Toyota Tundra engine failure? If you aren’t aware, the 3.4-liter V6 engine used in 2022 and 2024 Toyota Tundra, certain Lexus LX 600 and GX 550 vehicles has been under recall for engine failure. There are two recalls actually for the V35A engines with Toyota stating bearings are failing leading to catastrophic failure due to excessive debris in the engine block. This leftover debris from the factory aka swarf has become more of […] (read full article...)

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Avatar of Fightnfire
Fightnfire

Moderator

1,253 messages 2,150 likes

Tim, I watched the YouTube for this one and you're cracking me up lol. You fight so hard to not blame the manufacturer.

The article states "Two relevant production periods at the Alabama plant were identified between the production period covered by recall 24V-381 and the implementation of a design change to increase the robustness of the #1 main bearing"

If the engineered main bearing type and size or strength were not correct for the job leading to failures, partially possibly due to debris in the engine,... isn't that by definition a design flaw?

They're not saying the bearing manufacturer made a mistake and the bearing wasn't made to spec. They're saying they had to go back to the drawing board and design a new main bearing.

I'm just a moron with a keyboard but I'm sticking to what I said a couple of years ago on this topic. It's possible and likely manufacturing debris was causing some of these issues. It's also likely the meain bearings, and oil delivery, were flawed in some way. Too many teardown videos showing engines with failed main bearings and little or normal debris present. It seems like that is what Toyota is now saying too. They saw the most obvious issue, debris, and stopped there. Then, the engines kept failing and they had to look again.

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Avatar of TheDo114
TheDo114

Well-known member

762 messages 1,203 likes

Tim, I watched the YouTube for this one and you're cracking me up lol. You fight so hard to not blame the manufacturer.

The article states "Two relevant production periods at the Alabama plant were identified between the production period covered by recall 24V-381 and the implementation of a design change to increase the robustness of the #1 main bearing"

If the engineered main bearing type and size or strength were not correct for the job leading to failures, partially possibly due to debris in the engine,... isn't that by definition a design flaw?

They're not saying the bearing manufacturer made a mistake and the bearing wasn't made to spec. They're saying they had to go back to the drawing board and design a new main bearing.

I'm just a moron with a keyboard but I'm sticking to what I said a couple of years ago on this topic. It's possible and likely manufacturing debris was causing some of these issues. It's also likely the meain bearings, and oil delivery, were flawed in some way. Too many teardown videos showing engines with failed main bearings and little or normal debris present. It seems like that is what Toyota is now saying too. They saw the most obvious issue, debris, and stopped there. Then, the engines kept failing and they had to look again.

I think it depends. If Toyota designed the main bearing with no debris in mind, and then reality sets in where they realized that they can't remove the debris 100%, well you have to account for that.

The real question is, why are they having so many issues clearing the block?

@testerdahl Could you confirm that the larger debris popping up was not because of the original fix made?

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Avatar of Hilux
Hilux

Well-known member

425 messages 731 likes

Toyotas new tag line, Buy a Toyota get a free headache.

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Avatar of TheDo114
TheDo114

Well-known member

762 messages 1,203 likes

Toyotas new tag line, Buy a Toyota get a free headache.

If I was not on the internet, I would not know any of these engine issues are happening and that's what people forget.

My truck is performing really well and is not giving me any issues in the 8 months and 22 000km (14 000mi) have had it. The truck is 3 years old and the odometer is reading 74 000km (45 000mi) and so far so good. I'm hoping to keep it until it has 200-250 000km (120-150 000 miles) and then I'll look to change since the salt will have done it's job in ruining it...

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Avatar of testerdahl
testerdahl

Administrator

2,716 messages 4,601 likes

@testerdahl Could you confirm that the larger debris popping up was not because of the original fix made?

Unfortunately, it is Fort Knox right now with Toyota PR on further recall questions. What we can read though seems to make me believe the larger debris is now showing up which I find extremely odd.

I was going back and forth on the Tundras.com forum and did confirm this is an engine plant issue. The casting plant sends the casts to the engine plants and then those plants do further machining. The debris is coming from the further machining. Something about the cleaning process after the machining. I'm pretty shocked for a company that's been making its own engines for what dozens of years hasn't got that part of the process mastered?

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Avatar of TheDo114
TheDo114

Well-known member

762 messages 1,203 likes

Unfortunately, it is Fort Knox right now with Toyota PR on further recall questions. What we can read though seems to make me believe the larger debris is now showing up which I find extremely odd.

I was going back and forth on the Tundras.com forum and did confirm this is an engine plant issue. The casting plant sends the casts to the engine plants and then those plants do further machining. The debris is coming from the further machining. Something about the cleaning process after the machining. I'm pretty shocked for a company that's been making its own engines for what dozens of years hasn't got that part of the process mastered?

Thank you for getting as much information out there as possible. I read it that larger debris came before the fix was applied for the second round of engines but it’s heading in the right direction as of fall.

I saw the back and forth on the Tundra forum and you probably realized, but it’s a complete shit show over there right now.

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BarryB2

New member

3 messages 2 likes

Toyota's reputation may not recover.

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J
JBrown1786

New member

1 messages 2 likes

I’m now 2x as happy/confident that avoiding the new generation Tundra was the right choice when replaced my tornado totaled 2014 Limited Crewmax with a 2021 Limited Crewmax in the summer of 2024. The worst issue I have had is a rear axel seal that was replaced under warranty.

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Avatar of Fightnfire
Fightnfire

Moderator

1,253 messages 2,150 likes

The frustrating part is so many people saw the recall, assumed it was just a simple debris cleaning issue, and bought those 2023, 2024 etc.

But nothing had been fixed... I would be so pissed if I had bought after the recall.

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s
slevans

New member

1 messages 1 like

I’m fairly certain this issues goes beyond Toyota Tundra trucks. My 2025 Corolla Cross Hybrid, which was also built in Alabama, had a strikingly similar issue. I purchased the vehicle in late April and the car started having an issue in late May.

I was initially told that the problem was caused by bad fuel and that I would have to pay $8k+ for a fix. After a lot of complaining, frustration and multiple months of my car sitting at the Toyota service shop, they finally realized that it had nothing to do with bad fuel. Rather, it was a loose bolt that caused metal shavings in the engine.

I’ve had my car back for about 2 months now and it seems to be working fine after they serviced it. However, there’s always a nagging feeling that there could be more that they didn’t catch and/or the metal shavings in the engine could’ve led to other issues that went unnoticed.

Toyota recently reached out to offer to purchase my car back. What a headache!

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