Honda Insight Air Bag Sensor Recall — When the Air Bag Can Go Off On Its Own
Honda has conceded the problem in writing: NHTSA campaign 26V332000 covers vehicles where the front passenger seat weight sensor may crack and short circuit, which can cause the air bags to deploy unintentionally during a crash. An air bag that fires when it shouldn't is its own injury hazard. When a manufacturer concedes a safety-restraint defect this serious, RockPoint Law's attorneys pursue a buyback, replacement, or cash settlement.
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Honda (American Honda Motor Co.) is recalling certain 2019–2022 Honda Insight vehicles — one of 17 Honda and Acura models in this campaign, because the front passenger seat weight sensor may crack and short circuit, which can cause the air bags to deploy unintentionally during a crash (NHTSA 26V332000, reported May 21, 2026). Honda's filing is plain: air bags that deploy unintentionally during a crash increase the risk of injury. Dealers will replace the seat weight sensors, free of charge, and this campaign expands an earlier recall (24V064). A recall is the manufacturer admitting in writing that the vehicle was sold defective. If Honda can't make the vehicle right in a reasonable time, or the fix doesn't hold, your state's Lemon Law and the federal warranty acts may entitle you to a refund, a replacement vehicle, or cash, and RockPoint Law pursues that claim directly against Honda.
The official NHTSA filing
| NHTSA Campaign | 26V332000 |
|---|---|
| Date Reported | May 21, 2026 |
| Manufacturer | American Honda Motor Co. |
| Vehicles Affected | 98,892 (all models in the campaign) |
| Models Covered | Honda Insight (one of 17 Honda & Acura models) |
| Model Years | 2019–2022 Insight |
| Defect | Front passenger seat weight sensor may crack and short circuit, causing unintended air bag deployment |
| Manufacturer Remedy | Dealers replace the seat weight sensors, free of charge |
| Honda Customer Service | 1-888-234-2138 (Honda recall no. BOL, among others) |
| Safety Severity | Restraint Risk |
Can I keep driving while I wait for the repair?
NHTSA has not issued a Do Not Drive or Park Outside warning for this recall. You can generally keep driving while you wait for the free repair, but you should not ignore it: Air bags that deploy unintentionally during a crash increase the risk of injury. Schedule the recall service as soon as parts are available, and keep every repair order in case the fix does not hold.
A cracked sensor, and an air bag that can fire when it shouldn't
The front passenger seat has a weight sensor whose job is to tell the air bag control unit whether someone, and how large a someone — is sitting there, so the system can decide whether and how forcefully to deploy. In this recall, Honda concedes that “the front passenger seat weight sensor may crack and short circuit.” A sensor feeding the air bag system a faulty signal is a sensor the restraint system can no longer trust.
Honda's filing states the consequence directly: a cracked, shorting sensor “can cause the air bags to deploy unintentionally during a crash,” and “air bags that deploy unintentionally during a crash increase the risk of injury.” An air bag is a violent, single-use safety device; one that fires on the wrong cue can injure the very occupant it exists to protect.
This campaign is unusually broad — the same seat-weight-sensor defect reaches 17 Honda and Acura models, and it expands a previous recall, 24V064, meaning Honda has returned to this same restraint problem more than once. By filing 26V332000, Honda has formally acknowledged that the air bag system in these vehicles may not behave the way it must. Whether a sensor replacement fully restores a restraint system you can trust is exactly the question a Lemon Law claim is built to test.
Insight flagged for the air bag sensor recall? A safety-restraint defect is the kind of substantial safety issue that most often turns a recall into a claim. Let our attorneys review your service history.
Free Case Review →Why an air bag defect raises the stakes
Owners are right to be uneasy about an air bag that might fire on its own — the restraint system is the last line of defense in a crash, and it has to work exactly as designed, no more and no less. That unease is also the legal core of a Lemon Law claim: safety, value, and trust in the vehicle.
A recall obligates Honda to attempt a free repair — nothing more. It does not refund you, replace your Insight, or compensate you for owning a vehicle whose air bags you can no longer fully trust. A Lemon Law claim is your personal right to a real remedy when that repair comes up short. The recall proves the defect; the Lemon Law claim is how that proof becomes a refund.
A Lemon Law claim — under state statutes and the federal Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act — generally turns on three elements, and an air bag recall that expands an earlier one helps satisfy the first two before you ever reach the dealer:
- A substantial defect — an air bag that can deploy unintentionally strikes directly at the restraint system you rely on to survive a crash.
- The manufacturer's knowledge — recall 26V332000 is Honda's written admission, on the record, that the seat weight sensor can crack and short, and it expands an earlier recall, 24V064, on the same restraint problem.
- A reasonable number of failed repair attempts — this is the part you build — by documenting the sensor replacement, the date and mileage, and any air bag warning light that returns afterward.
Protect the vehicle, and the record
Owners who come out ahead document every service visit like evidence. Here is the sequence that protects your claim:
- Step 1 · Confirm
Verify your VIN and get the sensor replaced
Check your 17-digit VIN at NHTSA.gov or call Honda at 1-888-234-2138. If your Insight is included, have the dealer replace the front passenger seat weight sensor free of charge. Owner letters are expected to be mailed beginning July 6, 2026.
- Step 2 · Document
Get the repair order — in writing
Keep the repair order showing the date, mileage, the part replaced, and the recall number (26V332000). For a restraint defect, written proof of exactly what was corrected is essential to any later claim.
- Step 3 · Observe
Watch the air bag warning light
After the repair, watch for the air bag / SRS warning light, a “passenger air bag off” indicator that won't behave, or any restraint fault message. If one appears, log the date, mileage, and what you saw — a sensor problem that isn't fully resolved is exactly what to capture.
- Step 4 · Act
If Honda can't make it right, call counsel
If the repair drags on, the warning light returns, or the restraint fault persists, you may qualify for a buyback, replacement, or cash. That's the moment RockPoint Law takes it off your hands.
Air bag light back on after the Insight recall repair? That instinct is worth checking. Send us your service records and we'll tell you where you stand, free.
Talk to an Attorney →Honda Insight air bag sensor recall & Lemon Law questions
Does the Insight air bag recall automatically make my vehicle a lemon?
No. Recall 26V332000 is Honda conceding that the front passenger seat weight sensor may crack and short, which can cause unintended air bag deployment — strong evidence, but not the whole case. Whether your Insight is a lemon depends on two more things: that the defect substantially impairs the vehicle, and that Honda can't put it right in a reasonable number of attempts. A restraint warning that keeps returning, or repeat visits for the same sensor, is what tips it into a claim. We review your records and tell you if you've crossed that line.
I own a different Honda or Acura — am I covered too?
Possibly. NHTSA campaign 26V332000 covers 17 Honda and Acura models for the same seat-weight-sensor defect, including certain Accord, Civic, CR-V, Odyssey, Pilot, Passport, Ridgeline, HR-V, Fit, and Acura TLX, RDX, and MDX vehicles across various years. The surest way to confirm is to check your 17-digit VIN at NHTSA.gov or call Honda at 1-888-234-2138. If your VIN is included, the sensor replacement is free, and the same Lemon Law analysis applies.
Why does it matter that this recall “expands” an earlier one?
Honda's filing states that 26V332000 expands previous recall 24V064 — meaning Honda has returned to the same restraint problem more than once. For a Lemon Law or warranty claim, a manufacturer revisiting the same defect can strengthen the argument that the issue is substantial and not easily resolved. It's one of the facts we look at when we review your service history.
What does it cost to have RockPoint Law review my case?
Nothing to start. Your case review is free and confidential. In most Lemon Law and warranty matters the manufacturer pays attorney's fees if your claim succeeds, so you can pursue Honda without paying us out of pocket. Lemon Law eligibility depends on the specific facts of your case.
Insight air bag sensor still not right after the recall?
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