Recall Litigation · Toyota Land Cruiser Hybrid

Toyota Land Cruiser Hybrid Instrument Cluster Recall: When the Warnings May Not Show

Toyota has admitted the defect: NHTSA campaign 26V341000 covers vehicles where the instrument panel cluster combination meter may fail to display certain warnings or indicators. A failure to meet the federal standard for dashboard displays. A cluster that hides critical alerts, Toyota concedes, increases the risk of a crash or injury. When a manufacturer concedes a defect that fails a federal standard, RockPoint Law's attorneys pursue a buyback, replacement, or cash settlement.

81,893
Vehicles Recalled
26V341000
NHTSA Campaign
$50M+
Recovered for Drivers

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The Short Version

Toyota Motor Engineering & Manufacturing is recalling certain 2024–2025 Toyota Land Cruiser Hybrid vehicles, part of a multi-model campaign that also covers 2025 Lexus UX Hybrid, 2024 Lexus GX, and Toyota Mirai, because the instrument panel cluster combination meter may fail to display certain warnings or indicators (NHTSA 26V341000, reported May 27, 2026). As a result, these vehicles fail to comply with the federal standard for vehicle controls and displays. Toyota concedes that a cluster that fails to show critical safety information, such as engine coolant temperature or electrical charge, increases the risk of a crash or injury. Dealers will update the combination meter software, free of charge; owner letters are expected to be mailed July 12, 2026. A recall is the manufacturer admitting in writing that the vehicle was sold defective, here, one that doesn't meet a federal safety standard. If Toyota 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 Toyota.

Recall at a Glance

The official NHTSA filing

NHTSA Campaign26V341000
Date ReportedMay 27, 2026
ManufacturerToyota Motor Engineering & Manufacturing
Vehicles Affected81,893 (all models in the campaign)
Models CoveredToyota Land Cruiser Hybrid (campaign also covers Lexus UX Hybrid, Lexus GX, Toyota Mirai)
Model Years2024–2025 Land Cruiser Hybrid
DefectCombination meter may fail to display certain warnings/indicators; fails FMVSS 101
Manufacturer RemedyDealers update the combination meter software, free of charge
Toyota Customer Service1-800-331-4331 (Toyota recall nos. 26LB06, 26LA06, 26TB10, 26TA10)
Safety SeverityDisplay Failure
Is It Safe To Drive?

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: An instrument panel display that fails to show critical safety information, such as engine coolant temperature or electrical charge increases the risk of a crash or injury. Schedule the recall service as soon as parts are available, and keep every repair order in case the fix does not hold.

What Went Wrong

A cluster that may hide the warnings, and the danger of not knowing

The combination meter is the instrument cluster directly in front of the driver, the panel that shows warning and indicator lights for everything from engine temperature to the hybrid system's state of charge. In this recall, Toyota concedes that on these Land Cruiser Hybrid vehicles “the instrument panel cluster combination meter may fail to display certain warnings or indicators.” A warning that never appears is one a driver can't act on.

This is a federal compliance failure, not just Toyota's own risk assessment. The filing states the vehicles “fail to comply with the requirements of Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard number 101, ‘Control and Displays,’” and that “an instrument panel display that fails to show critical safety information, such as engine coolant temperature or electrical charge, increases the risk of a crash or injury.” Missing an overheating or low-charge warning can let a small problem become a breakdown, or a crash, before the driver ever knows.

The remedy is a combination meter software update. A calibration can restore the missing warnings, but owners are right to ask whether reprogramming fully resolves a cluster that has already failed to display them, and this campaign is broad, spanning four Toyota and Lexus models. By filing recall 26V341000, Toyota has formally acknowledged the noncompliance. Whether the fix actually restores a vehicle whose dashboard you can trust is exactly the question a Lemon Law claim is built to test.

Land Cruiser Hybrid flagged for the instrument-cluster recall? A display defect that fails a federal safety standard is exactly the kind of issue that turns a recall into a claim. Let our attorneys review your service history.

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How Serious Is It

What Toyota's own filing says, and what it doesn't

Let's keep this honest. This is not a defect that yanks the wheel out of your hands or stalls the engine in traffic. Nothing in campaign 26V341000 says the Land Cruiser Hybrid loses power, brakes, or steering. What Toyota concedes is narrower and, in its own way, just as worth taking seriously: the combination meter “may fail to display certain warnings or indicators.” The car keeps driving. It just may stop telling you when something is wrong.

Why does a missing telltale rise to a federal recall? Because the instrument cluster is itself a regulated safety system. Toyota's filing states these vehicles fail to comply with FMVSS 101, “Control and Displays”. The standard that requires a vehicle to show specific warnings and indicators a driver can rely on. The subject Mirai also fails FMVSS 305, the electric-vehicle electrolyte-spillage and shock-protection standard. A blank or incomplete cluster isn't a cosmetic glitch; it removes information the car is legally required to give you. As Toyota puts it, a panel that doesn't show engine coolant temperature or electrical charge increases the risk of a crash or injury, not because the part fails while you drive, but because an overheating or low-charge problem can develop unseen until it's done damage.

Want a sense of how often this is actually surfacing in the field? You can read owner-filed reports for these vehicles yourself: search your year and model in the complaints database at NHTSA.gov. We deliberately don't put a complaint tally on this page, raw counts are easy to misread out of context, and we'd rather you see the record straight from the source than take a number from us.

If your cluster has already dropped a warning, gone partly blank, or behaved oddly: capture it before it clears itself. Photograph or video the display, note the date and mileage, and keep any repair order from a dealer visit. A display defect that comes and goes is easy for a dealer to call “no trouble found”, your own dated record is often what proves it was real and recurring.
The Legal Angle

Why a federal-standard display failure raises the stakes

Owners are right to be uneasy about a cluster that might not show a coolant-temperature or charge warning when it matters, the dashboard is how the vehicle tells you something is wrong. That unease is also the legal core of a Lemon Law claim: safety, value, and trust in the vehicle.

A recall obligates Toyota to attempt a free repair, nothing more. It does not refund you, replace your Land Cruiser, or compensate you for owning a vehicle that didn't meet a federal safety standard. A Lemon Law claim is your personal right to a real remedy when that repair comes up short. The recall is the proof; the claim is the leverage that turns it into compensation.

There is a second harm a recall never touches: diminished value. A late-model Land Cruiser Hybrid carrying a documented federal-compliance recall on its history is worth less at trade-in, private sale, or auction than the vehicle you thought you bought, software-updated or not, that record follows the VIN. On a flagship that holds its price largely because it is supposed to be flawless, that lost value is real money, and recovering it is part of what a properly built claim seeks alongside a buyback, replacement, or cash.

Three things drive almost every Lemon Law claim, whether under state law or the federal Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act, and a recall that admits a federal safety-standard failure helps satisfy the first two before you ever reach the dealer:

  • A substantial defect. A cluster that may fail to display warnings, in a vehicle that fails its federal display standard, hides the safety information a driver needs to react in time.
  • The manufacturer's knowledge. Recall 26V341000 is Toyota's written admission, on the record, that the combination meter may fail to display certain warnings and that the vehicles fail to comply with a federal standard.
  • A reasonable number of failed repair attempts. This is the part you build, by documenting the software update, the date and mileage, and any warning or indicator that fails to appear afterward.
When A Defect Becomes A Buyback

How many failed repairs turn a recalled Land Cruiser into a buyback?

There is no universal national threshold, states set their own Lemon Law limits, and the federal Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act sits over all of them. A defect tied to a federal safety-standard non-compliance generally counts as a “substantial” impairment, which in many states lowers the number of attempts the law requires. Treat the triggers below as a map, not a verdict, the exact figures that apply turn on where your vehicle is registered.

Federal-standard non-complianceBecause these vehicles fail to comply with FMVSS 101, a court is far less likely to treat the defect as trivial. Many state Lemon Laws presume a “reasonable number of attempts” has been met after relatively few repair attempts when the defect is safety- or compliance-related, fewer than for a purely cosmetic complaint.
Same defect, repeatedThe common presumption for a defect that keeps coming back is roughly three to four attempts at the same problem without a lasting fix, here, a warning or indicator that still fails to appear after one or more software updates.
Days out of serviceMany states also presume a lemon when the vehicle is cumulatively out of service for repair 30 days or more within the eligibility period, relevant if the dealer can't complete the update on the first visit, or a cluster has to be diagnosed and reflashed more than once.
Federal Magnuson-Moss ActApplies nationwide and doesn't fix a hard count, it asks whether the manufacturer had a reasonable opportunity to repair a warranty defect and failed. A software update that doesn't permanently restore the missing warnings fits this framework squarely.
Why “software update” matters legally: when the official remedy is a single reprogramming, there is real room for the first attempt not to fully cure a cluster that has already failed to display warnings, and a missing indicator that returns after a documented update is exactly what builds toward the “reasonable number of attempts” threshold. Before pursuing a claim, RockPoint Law confirms the precise threshold that applies in your state and to your registration.
What To Do Now

Protect the vehicle, and the record

Owners who recover the most treat every dealer visit as evidence. Here is the path that keeps your options open:

  1. Step 1 · Confirm

    Verify your VIN and get the software update

    Check your 17-digit VIN at NHTSA.gov or call Toyota at 1-800-331-4331 (Toyota recalls 26LB06, 26LA06, 26TB10, 26TA10). If included, have the dealer update the combination meter software free of charge. Owner letters are expected to be mailed July 12, 2026.

  2. Step 2 · Document

    Get the repair order, in writing

    Keep the repair order showing the date, mileage, the software update applied, and the recall number (26V341000). For a display defect that fails a federal standard, written proof of exactly what was done is essential to any later claim.

  3. Step 3 · Observe

    Watch for missing warnings

    After the update, note any time a warning or indicator fails to appear, or the cluster behaves abnormally, the date, mileage, and what you couldn't see. A photo or video is powerful evidence. A display problem the update didn't fully resolve is exactly what to capture.

  4. Step 4 · Act

    If Toyota can't make it right, call counsel

    If the update doesn't hold and warnings still fail to display, you may qualify for a buyback, replacement, or cash. That's the threshold where RockPoint Law takes over the fight.

Land Cruiser Hybrid warnings still not showing after the recall update? That instinct is worth checking. Send us your service records and we'll tell you where you stand, free.

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What To Expect At The Repair

What happens when you bring it in for the fix

The remedy here is software, which is part of what makes this recall worth scrutinizing, a quick reflash can hide a stubborn defect. Here is what a realistic dealer visit looks like, and what to ask for while you're there:

  • The fix is a software update, not parts. Toyota's remedy is to reprogram the combination meter software at no charge. Weigh that carefully: a calibration change either restores the missing warnings or it doesn't, and if it doesn't, the next step is repeated attempts rather than a part swap. Either way, the visit only counts if it's on paper.
  • Confirm the update actually installed. Ask the technician to verify the combination meter software version before and after, and get it written on the repair order. A recall marked “completed” in Toyota's system isn't the same as a warning that now reliably appears, make the record show the software actually changed.
  • Get everything documented. Insist the repair order lists the recall number (26V341000 or the Toyota/Lexus internal numbers 26LB06, 26LA06, 26TB10, 26TA10), the software version, your mileage, and any display symptom you reported. A vague “performed recall” line is worth far less later than a detailed one.
  • Track days out of service. A reflash is usually quick, but if the dealer has to order software, schedule a return visit, or repeat the update, log every day the vehicle is unavailable. Cumulative days out of service is its own Lemon Law trigger in many states.
  • Don't accept “no trouble found” as the end. A missing-warning defect can be invisible at the service desk if the cluster happens to display correctly that day. If you reported a dropped indicator and the dealer applies the update and sends you off, that visit still counts, keep the paperwork and keep watching the cluster at every startup.
Related Recalls

Related recalls we're watching for owners

If any of these are in your driveway too, we take the same litigation-authority approach. We watch instrument-display and electronics recalls across makes:

Common Questions

Toyota Land Cruiser Hybrid instrument cluster recall & Lemon Law questions

Is it safe to drive my Land Cruiser Hybrid while I wait for the recall repair?

NHTSA has not issued a Do Not Drive or Park Outside order for recall 26V341000, so Toyota has not told owners to stop driving. This is a display-and-compliance defect, not a loss-of-control defect, the vehicle keeps driving normally. But don't ignore it: the combination meter may fail to show certain warnings, including engine coolant temperature or electrical charge, so schedule the free software update as soon as it's available, and in the meantime stay alert for any sign of overheating or a hybrid-system problem the dashboard might not flag. If a warning seems to be missing or the cluster behaves oddly, have it checked rather than living with it.

Does the Land Cruiser Hybrid instrument-cluster recall automatically make my vehicle a lemon?

No. Recall 26V341000 is Toyota conceding the combination meter may fail to display certain warnings and that the vehicles fail to comply with the federal display standard, strong evidence, but not the whole case. Whether your Land Cruiser Hybrid is a lemon depends on two more things: that the defect substantially impairs the vehicle, and that Toyota can't put it right in a reasonable number of attempts. A warning that keeps failing to appear after the update, or repeat visits for the same issue, is what tips it into a claim. We review your records and tell you if you've crossed that line.

I own a Lexus GX, Lexus UX Hybrid, or Toyota Mirai, am I covered too?

Yes. NHTSA campaign 26V341000 covers certain 2024 Lexus GX, 2025 Lexus UX Hybrid, and Toyota Mirai vehicles alongside the 2024–2025 Land Cruiser Hybrid, for the same combination-meter defect. The Mirai additionally fails FMVSS 305, the electric-vehicle electrolyte-spillage and shock-protection standard. The surest way to confirm is to check your 17-digit VIN at NHTSA.gov or call Toyota at 1-800-331-4331. If your VIN is included, the software update is free, and the same Lemon Law analysis applies.

Why does it matter that the vehicle fails a federal safety standard?

Toyota's filing states these vehicles fail to comply with FMVSS 101, the federal standard for vehicle controls and displays. A vehicle that doesn't meet a federal safety standard it was legally required to meet is, by definition, not as warranted. For a Lemon Law or warranty claim, a documented federal-standard non-compliance is a strong fact, because it goes to whether the vehicle was fit for sale in the first place, not just whether something later broke.

How serious is a cluster that doesn't show a warning?

It's serious enough that federal regulators require a recall, but it's worth being precise about why. The Land Cruiser Hybrid doesn't lose power, brakes, or steering from this defect. The risk is that the cluster may not show critical information like engine coolant temperature or electrical charge, so a developing problem , overheating, a hybrid-system fault, can go unseen until it causes damage or a breakdown. Toyota's own filing ties that hidden-warning scenario to an increased risk of a crash or injury. The defect is about what you can't see, not about the vehicle failing underneath you.

The Mirai is in the same recall but I drive the Land Cruiser. Why are two standards listed?

The campaign spans several models that share the affected combination-meter software, but the standards each model violates aren't identical. All of them fail FMVSS 101 for the display defect. The subject Mirai also fails FMVSS 305, which covers electrolyte spillage and electrical-shock protection in electric-powered vehicles. For your Land Cruiser Hybrid, the relevant non-compliance is FMVSS 101, the display standard. The shared software defect across four Toyota and Lexus models is part of what makes this a broad campaign rather than a one-off.

The software update already installed. Can I still have a claim?

Yes, potentially. A software patch is only a cure if it actually ends the defect, and reflashes for safety systems sometimes fall short or have to be repeated. If a warning or indicator still fails to appear after the update, that can support a buyback, replacement, or cash settlement. Keep proof of every update and dealer visit, including the software version before and after, those records are the spine of your case.

My cluster already dropped a warning on me. Do I still have a claim?

Quite possibly, and you should preserve the evidence now. A Land Cruiser Hybrid whose combination meter has actually failed to show a warning or indicator, tied to this recalled defect, is a strong candidate for a buyback, replacement, or cash settlement, especially if it recurs after the update. Photograph or video the cluster, note the date and mileage, and keep every repair order and the recall notice; those records are the backbone of the claim we'd bring against Toyota. The key is documenting that the same defect kept Toyota from making the vehicle right.

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 Toyota without paying us out of pocket. Lemon Law eligibility depends on the specific facts of your case.

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