Quick Answer (TL;DR)
FCA US, LLC (Stellantis) is recalling certain 2022 Jeep Grand Cherokee vehicles — because software (NHTSA campaign 26V328000, reported May 21, 2026). The remedy: dealers will update the occupant restraint controller module software, free of charge. If the defect persists after the fix, or your dealer can't complete the repair within 30 days, you may qualify for a buyback, replacement, or cash compensation under your state's lemon law.
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Recall at a Glance
| Field | Detail |
|---|---|
| NHTSA Campaign | 26V328000 |
| Date Reported | May 21, 2026 |
| Manufacturer | FCA US, LLC (Stellantis) |
| Affected Vehicles | Pending NHTSA publication |
| Model Years | 2022 |
| Models Covered | Jeep Grand Cherokee |
| Defect | Software |
| Safety Consequence | Delayed air bag deployment during a crash increases the risk of injury. |
| Remedy | Dealers will update the occupant restraint controller module software, free of charge. Owner notification letters are expected to be mailed June 11, 2026. Owners may contact Chrysler customer service at 800-853-1403. Chrysler's number for this recall is 01D. Vehicle Identification Numbers (VINs) involved in this recall will be searchable on NHTSA.gov on May 28, 2026. |
| Jeep Customer Service | 1-877-426-5337 |
| Lemon Law Severity | STANDARD |
What Is the Defect?
FCA US, LLC (Stellantis) is recalling certain 2022 Jeep Grand Cherokee vehicles. Chrysler (FCA US, LLC) is recalling certain 2022-2026 Jeep Grand Cherokee and 2023-2025 Jeep Grand Cherokee L vehicles. A software error in the occupant restraint controller module may cause the delayed deployment of the side air bags during a crash. As such, these vehicles fail to comply with the requirements of Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard number 214, "Side Impact Protection."
The Safety Consequence
Delayed air bag deployment during a crash increases the risk of injury. NHTSA classifies this as a safety-of-life issue. The remedy must be completed by an authorized Jeep dealer; owners should not delay scheduling the fix.
The Manufacturer's Remedy
FCA US, LLC (Stellantis) will provide the following remedy free of charge: dealers will update the occupant restraint controller module software, free of charge. Owners may contact Jeep customer service at 1-877-426-5337 — referencing NHTSA campaign 26V328000.
Owner Timeline — What to Expect (Weeks 1-4)
For most Grand Cherokee owners, the recall repair follows a predictable path. Here's the typical 30-day window — and where lemon-law rights start to apply if it goes off track:
Confirm your VIN at NHTSA.gov. If included, Jeep mails an owner notification letter. Schedule the repair at any authorized Jeep dealer.
Dealer performs the remedy (dealers will update the occupant restraint controller module software, free of charge). Save the repair order with date, mileage, technician notes, and recall campaign number.
Drive normally and watch for any return of the defect. Log mileage, location, and time of any incident.
If the defect returns, if dealer can't complete the fix within 30 days, or if a second repair fails — you may qualify under your state's lemon law. Call us.
Does This Qualify for Lemon Law?
A recall by itself does not automatically qualify a vehicle as a lemon. What matters is whether the defect is fixed after reasonable repair attempts. Most state lemon laws require:
- Substantial impairment to safety, value, or use of the vehicle (the software clearly qualifies)
- A reasonable number of repair attempts (typically 3-4 for the same issue, or 1-2 for safety defects)
- OR 30+ cumulative days out of service for warranty repairs
- The defect persists despite the manufacturer's attempt to fix
Recall 26V328000 helps a lemon-law claim two ways: (1) the recall itself is documented evidence the defect exists, and (2) if the manufacturer's remedy doesn't permanently fix the software — or introduces a new problem — that failed remedy is exactly what lemon law was designed to address. The federal Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act adds an additional layer of protection that typically requires the manufacturer to pay your attorney fees.
Your Lemon Law Rights by State
Easy Lemon represents Grand Cherokee owners nationwide. Lemon-law statutes vary by state — here are key jurisdictions where we have deep state-court experience:
Texas
24 months / 24K miles. 4 repair attempts (or 2 for serious safety defects).
Arizona
24 months / 24K miles. 4 repair attempts or 30+ days out of service. Safety defects: 2 attempts..
New York
24 months / 18K miles. 4 repair attempts or 30+ days out of service. Among the most consumer-friendly..
New Jersey
24 months / 24K miles. 3 repair attempts or 20+ days out of service. 6-year statute of limitations..
Free VIN Lookup — Is Your Grand Cherokee Affected?
Check your 17-character VIN against NHTSA campaign 26V328000
Enter your VIN below — we'll open the official NHTSA recall lookup in a new tab so you can verify whether your specific Grand Cherokee is covered.
Prefer to talk to a lemon-law attorney first? Get a free case review — we'll handle the VIN check and tell you whether you qualify under your state's lemon law.
What to Do Right Now
- Check your VIN at NHTSA.gov/recalls to confirm your 2022 Jeep Grand Cherokee is included in campaign 26V328000.
- Schedule the recall repair at an authorized Jeep dealer (1-877-426-5337). The repair is free of charge.
- Save every repair order. Get a paper or digital copy showing date, mileage, technician notes, and campaign number 26V328000.
- Document any incidents. If the defect returns after the recall fix, log the date, time, mileage, road conditions — and photos or video if safe. This evidence is critical for a lemon-law claim.
- Contact a lemon law attorney if the defect returns, if your dealer can't complete the fix within 30 days, or if your VIN is on a do-not-drive list. Get a free case review here.
Past Jeep Lemon-Law Settlements
Easy Lemon has recovered millions for Jeep owners nationwide. Three representative outcomes:
Easy Lemon — No Cost Case Review
Easy Lemon represents vehicle owners nationwide, with deep state-court experience in Florida, Texas, Georgia, Arizona, New York, and New Jersey. No upfront fees. When we win, FCA US, LLC (Stellantis) typically pays our attorney fees under the federal Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act.
Call 1-855-435-3666 or submit your case online — VIN check is free.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the 2026 Jeep Grand Cherokee software recall covered by lemon law?
Yes, if the defect substantially impairs the safety, value, or use of your 2022 Jeep Grand Cherokee and cannot be repaired after reasonable attempts. NHTSA campaign 26V328000 itself is documented evidence the software exists — strengthening any lemon-law claim under state law and federal Magnuson-Moss.
What if my Jeep dealer can't perform the recall repair?
If FCA US, LLC (Stellantis) or its dealer network cannot complete the dealers will update the occupant restraint controller module software, free of charge for recall 26V328000 within roughly 30 cumulative days, that delay can independently qualify the vehicle under state lemon law as an inability-to-repair — even if you never had a failed repair attempt.
Do I need to complete the recall repair before filing a lemon-law claim?
In most cases, yes. Courts and arbitrators expect FCA US, LLC (Stellantis) to be given an opportunity to cure the defect. Recommended path: complete the dealer's recall repair first, document each visit, and file a lemon-law claim only if the defect persists or the dealer can't perform the fix within 30 days.
How much can I recover under Jeep lemon law for the 26V328000 recall?
Three outcomes are common for owners of the affected 2022 Jeep Grand Cherokee: a manufacturer buyback (full purchase price minus a mileage-use deduction), a comparable replacement vehicle, or cash compensation if you keep the vehicle. Federal Magnuson-Moss claims can also recover attorney fees — typically paid by FCA US, LLC (Stellantis), not by you.
How do I check if my Grand Cherokee VIN is affected by recall 26V328000?
Enter your 17-character VIN at nhtsa.gov/recalls. If your VIN is included in NHTSA campaign 26V328000, you'll see the open recall listed. You can also call Jeep customer service at 1-877-426-5337 with your VIN, or use the free VIN check on the Easy Lemon contact page to learn about your lemon-law rights.
How long do I have to file a lemon-law claim for the Grand Cherokee recall?
Statute of limitations varies by state: Florida and Texas typically allow 4 years from the manufacturer's last repair attempt, Georgia 1-2 years, Arizona 4 years, New York 4 years, and New Jersey 6 years. Federal Magnuson-Moss claims may extend the window. Document every repair visit for the 26V328000 fix and contact a lemon-law attorney early to preserve your rights.
What is the remedy for the Jeep Grand Cherokee recall 26V328000?
FCA US, LLC (Stellantis)'s remedy is: dealers will update the occupant restraint controller module software, free of charge. The fix is provided free of charge under federal recall law. If the remedy fails to fix the software, that failed remedy strengthens your lemon-law case — keep the dealer's repair order and any post-repair incident logs.
Does the software count as a safety defect?
Yes. NHTSA classifies the software as a safety issue: delayed air bag deployment during a crash increases the risk of injury.. Safety defects typically qualify for lemon-law relief faster than non-safety issues — most state statutes require fewer repair attempts (often just 2) for documented safety defects.
Affected by the Jeep Grand Cherokee recall? Get a free case review.
No upfront fees. When we win, FCA US, LLC (Stellantis) typically pays our fees under federal Magnuson-Moss law.
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Reviewed by the Easy Lemon editorial team on .