Audi's Best-Selling Q5 Recalled Over Seat Belt Failure Risk
Adding to the ongoing recall crisis of 2026, Volkswagen Group of America has issued a formal safety recall for 7,425 of its popular 2025 Audi Q5 and SQ5 crossovers. When a high-volume seller like the Q5 is involved, even a small defect percentage demands immediate attention, and this particular issue centers on a critical safety component: the front seat belt assemblies.
What's Wrong
According to the defect report recently filed with the NHTSA (26V266), the seat-belt pretensioners for both the driver and front passenger seats may fail to maintain proper tension during an accident. The components, sourced from tier-one supplier Safety Autoparts Mexico, suffer from a manufacturing variance that allows for "gas blow by" at the sealing piston upon activation.
In practice, if you are involved in a crash, the pretensioner's locking mechanism may suffer a thermally induced failure. This means the seat belt could allow excessive slack rather than locking - "tensioning" - the occupant firmly against the seat, substantially increasing the risk of injury when you need restraint the most.
The Investigation
Audi first caught wind of the irregularity during routine testing back in November 2025. What followed was a rigorous, months-long investigation involving extensive testing to isolate the root cause. Fortunately, Audi's proactive internal monitoring caught the issue before the public did; the automaker reports that there are currently no known crashes, injuries, or warranty claims associated with this defect in the wild. The supplier officially implemented a new, alternative ball-lock design on February 24, 2026, to correct the issue on the assembly line.
The recall population specifically targets vehicles produced between July 10 and December 14, 2025. The breakdown of affected models is as follows:
- 2025 Audi Q5: 5,344 units
- 2025 Audi Q5 Sportback: 769 units
- 2025 Audi SQ5: 1,041 units
- 2025 Audi SQ5 Sportback: 271 units
What To Do About It
To remedy the situation, Audi dealers will replace one or both front seat belt assemblies entirely free of charge. Because all affected vehicles remain well within their New Vehicle Limited Warranty, no reimbursement program for prior out-of-pocket repairs is necessary.
Dealer notifications are officially rolling out on May 1, 2026. Owners of the affected luxury crossovers can expect to receive their formal notification letters via mail on or before June 23, 2026. As always, owners can proactively check their VIN against the NHTSA database to confirm if their daily driver requires a trip to the service bay.
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This story was originally published May 1, 2026 at 9:42 AM.