
Tesla's embattled Cybertruck has been hit with its eighth recall in just 15 months, with federal regulators ordering the company to fix a dangerous defect affecting virtually all 46,000 vehicles where a stainless steel exterior panel can detach while driving and create hazardous road debris for other motorists.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration issued the recall after discovering that the cant rail assembly, a prominent trim piece running along both sides of the windshield connecting to the roof, is adhered with an adhesive prone to environmental embrittlement. Videos circulating on social media show people literally peeling off the panels with their bare hands, exposing what critics call catastrophic quality control failures at the electric vehicle manufacturer.
"The vehicle Elon Musk once described as literally bulletproof relies on glue at key trim joints that seemingly can't withstand the weather. That is not acceptable. You just glued your truck together."
The recall covers all 2024 and 2025 model year Cybertrucks manufactured between November 13, 2023, and February 27, 2025. Tesla has identified 151 warranty claims potentially related to the defect, though the company reports no collisions, fatalities, or injuries tied to the problem thus far. The fix requires replacing the panel with proper adhesive and adding redundant welded metal studs and clamps for additional security.
This latest setback adds to a growing list of quality issues that have plagued the futuristic stainless steel pickup since deliveries began in late 2023. Previous recalls addressed problems including accelerator pedals that could become trapped in interior trim causing unintended acceleration, faulty drive inverters that may cause loss of power, malfunctioning rearview cameras, defective windshield wiper motors, incorrect dashboard font sizes, and another loose exterior trim piece.
Despite Musk's claims of million-plus reservations and manufacturing capacity for 500,000 units annually, Tesla has delivered fewer than 50,000 Cybertrucks, achieving less than 10% of production targets. The recall window encompasses virtually the truck's entire production run to date.
The timing compounds Tesla's mounting challenges as the company faces unprecedented turbulence. Shares have plummeted 42% in 2025 amid cratering global sales, protests at dealerships, and growing backlash against CEO Elon Musk's prominent role in the Trump administration's Department of Government Efficiency. Tesla showrooms and vehicles have been targeted by activists, with incidents including Molotov cocktails thrown at dealerships and swastikas spray-painted on cars.
Major Tesla investor Ross Gerber has publicly called for Musk to step down as CEO, arguing the company's association with Musk's political activities is destroying sales of electric vehicles meant to combat climate change. Treasury Secretary Howard Lutnick's televised appeals to buy Tesla stock have failed to halt the decline, raising questions about whether the Cybertruck's quality problems and Musk's divisive public profile have permanently damaged the brand's reputation among its core environmentally conscious customer base.




