What the NHTSA data shows about Cadillac recalls
RecallScanner has indexed 30 Cadillac recall campaigns across 8 models currently tracked in the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) public database. Each campaign represents a defect or non-compliance that Cadillac or NHTSA determined creates an unreasonable safety risk. Under federal law, every repair tied to these campaigns must be performed at no charge to the current owner, regardless of whether the vehicle was purchased new, used, or is outside the original warranty period.
Most common recall categories for Cadillac
Based on the current NHTSA campaign set, the three most frequent recall categories affecting Cadillac vehicles are electrical system (6 campaigns), software / sensors (3 campaigns), and brakes (3 campaigns). These categories tend to be the first place a prospective buyer should look when evaluating a used Cadillac, because they cluster around systems that are expensive to inspect independently and that most owners do not think to check before purchase.
The Cadillac model with the highest count in our dataset right now is the LYRIQ, which appears in 9 of the 30 tracked campaigns. A high campaign count does not automatically mean a model is unreliable. It often reflects higher production volume, longer time on the road, and more thorough NHTSA surveillance. What matters for your specific vehicle is whether any of those campaigns are still open against your VIN.
In 2026, NHTSA recorded 1 new Cadillac recall campaign in our tracked dataset. Recall activity fluctuates year to year as investigations open and close, new defects are reported by owners, and manufacturers self-report issues they uncover through warranty claims or field data. The count for any single year is less meaningful than the pattern across several years, and less meaningful still than whether a campaign applies to your specific VIN.
Roughly 100% of the Cadillac recalls currently indexed here mention fire, crash, injury, death, or loss of vehicle control in the consequence language. That figure is not a measure of how dangerous the brand is overall (every recall involves some safety concern by definition), but it is a useful signal that a given campaign is worth resolving quickly rather than waiting until your next scheduled service.
How to use this page
If you already own a Cadillac, the fastest and most reliable answer comes from the VIN checker above. A VIN lookup queries NHTSA's live recall API and tells you whether your specific vehicle has an open, unresolved campaign, which is a stricter and more personal test than browsing the full model-level list. If you are researching a used Cadillacbefore buying, start with the model pages below to see the complete campaign history for that nameplate, then run the seller's VIN through the checker to confirm whether prior owners completed the free repairs or left them open.
Analysis generated from the current RecallScanner dataset, which is sourced from NHTSA's public recall and complaint APIs and refreshed daily. RecallScanner is independent and not affiliated with Cadillac, NHTSA, or any U.S. government agency.