VIN-based recall lookup tool

Confirm Rolls-Royce Recalls Before Every Journey

Rolls-Royce models like the Ghost, Phantom, Wraith, and Cullinan have appeared in NHTSA campaigns — a quick VIN check confirms any open recall on yours.

Recall Basics

What is a Rolls-Royce Open Safety Recall?

A safety recall is issued when a vehicle or one of its components fails to meet federal safety standards or contains a defect that creates an unreasonable risk of crash, injury, or death. Manufacturers (and sometimes the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration directly) announce recalls so registered owners can have the affected part inspected and repaired at no cost. Outstanding recalls travel with the vehicle — second and third owners often miss the original notification letter, which is why a VIN-based recall check matters.

Bespoke ownership, real recalls

Protect Your Rolls-Royce Investment

Rolls-Royce produces low volumes of hand-built motor cars, but its vehicles still appear in safety campaigns alongside parent company BMW Group. Past Rolls-Royce recalls have involved Takata airbag inflators on earlier Phantoms, fuel-system concerns, electrical and software faults shared with BMW underpinnings, and suspension components on models like the Ghost and Wraith. Goodwood and BMW-managed dealers handle remedies under warranty, but campaigns can sit unaddressed for years on cars that change hands often.

Second and third owners are most exposed. A pre-owned Phantom or Cullinan may have moved through brokers, auctions, or private sales where notification letters never reached the current driver. Because Rolls-Royce service is performed only at authorized dealers, an unrepaired recall is a clear signal the car has skipped the network. A VIN check surfaces every open Rolls-Royce campaign so you can book the fix before it affects safety, resale, or collector value.

Recall categories to know

Issues That Have Affected Rolls-Royce Models

Takata Airbag Inflator Campaigns

Rolls-Royce was drawn into the industry-wide Takata recall, with earlier Phantom-generation cars among the affected population. The defect involves driver or passenger airbag inflators that can degrade with age and humidity, potentially rupturing on deployment and sending metal fragments into the cabin. Because these Phantoms are often kept in low-mileage collections and pass between private buyers, many remain on the road with original inflators in place. A VIN lookup is the only reliable way to confirm whether a specific Rolls-Royce has had the Takata remedy completed at an authorized dealer.

Fuel-System and High-Pressure Pump Issues

Rolls-Royce shares twin-turbocharged V12 architecture and fuel-system components with parent BMW, and campaigns covering high-pressure fuel pumps, fuel pump control modules, and fuel-line sealing have reached Ghost, Wraith, and Dawn models in some years. Symptoms can include hard starting, stalling, or in rarer cases fuel leakage near hot engine components. Owners who bought used through non-Rolls-Royce channels may not know whether the updated parts or software calibrations have been installed, so a VIN check is the simplest way to confirm fuel-system work is current.

Electrical, Lighting, and Software Updates

Modern Rolls-Royce motor cars run sophisticated BMW-derived electronic architectures, and recalls have addressed instrument-cluster software, daytime running light circuits, rear-view camera displays, and infotainment-related compliance issues. While these faults rarely create immediate driving hazards, several involve federal motor vehicle safety standards that require a free dealer remedy. On a Cullinan, Ghost, or Spectre, software remedies are quick to perform but easy to overlook, and a recall lookup confirms whether all bulletins and reflashes have been applied to your specific VIN.

Suspension and Air-Spring Concerns

Rolls-Royce vehicles ride on advanced air suspension systems engineered for the brand's signature 'magic carpet' feel, and campaigns have occasionally touched air-spring components, suspension fasteners, or related control modules on Ghost, Wraith, and Phantom platforms. A failure can affect ride height, handling, and in rare cases tire clearance. Because suspension repairs on a Rolls-Royce are expensive outside warranty, owners benefit from confirming any open suspension-related recall is closed at a Goodwood-authorized dealer rather than a general independent shop.

Seat Belt and Restraint Hardware

Like many luxury manufacturers, Rolls-Royce has issued small-population recalls covering seat belt anchor bolts, buckle assemblies, or restraint sensors that may not meet federal safety standards under specific conditions. These campaigns often involve a quick inspection and, if needed, replacement of hardware at no cost. Because Rolls-Royce production runs are short, even a low-VIN-count recall can sweep up a meaningful share of a model year, so owners of a Ghost, Phantom, Cullinan, or Dawn should always cross-check their VIN before assuming their car is unaffected.

Three-Step Process

How to Check Rolls-Royce Recalls by VIN

1

Step 1

Locate your 17-character VIN — printed on the dashboard at the base of the windshield, on the driver-side door jamb, or on your registration card.

2

Step 2

Enter the VIN, your email, and a phone number into the form above and submit. Our system runs the VIN against the latest NHTSA recall and manufacturer notice databases.

3

Step 3

Receive your full recall report with every open and closed recall, the specific component affected, the safety risk, and the manufacturer remedy reference.

Owner questions answered

Recall Answers for Rolls-Royce Owners

Where do I find the VIN on my Rolls-Royce?

Look at the lower driver-side windshield, the driver door jamb sticker, or your registration and insurance documents. The Rolls-Royce VIN is 17 characters long.

Does Rolls-Royce pay for recall repairs?

Yes. Federally mandated safety recalls are repaired free of charge at any authorized Rolls-Royce dealer, regardless of the car's age, mileage, or how many owners it has had.

How long does a Rolls-Royce recall repair take?

Software updates can be done in under an hour, while airbag, fuel-system, or suspension remedies may keep the car at the dealer for a day or more depending on parts.

Can I drive my Rolls-Royce with an open recall?

It depends on the defect. Many recalls are precautionary, but airbag and fuel-system campaigns should be addressed quickly — the dealer will advise based on your specific VIN.

Will an open recall lower my Rolls-Royce resale value?

It can. Buyers and collectors of pre-owned Rolls-Royce motor cars expect a clean recall record, and an unresolved campaign is an easy reason to negotiate the price down.

Are pre-owned Rolls-Royce models more likely to have open recalls?

Often yes. Cars sold privately or through brokers may miss recall mailings, so used Phantom, Ghost, and Cullinan buyers should always verify recall status by VIN.