Rivian Automotive has issued a recall for nearly 35,000 of its electric delivery vans after identifying a potential problem with the driver-side seat belt pretensioner cable. The notice, published by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, covers model years 2022 through 2025. Production of the affected vans spans December 10, 2021, to November 8, 2025.
The issue stems from repeated misuse rather than a manufacturing flaw. According to Rivian, some drivers were sitting on the belt while it remained buckled, placing excessive strain on the pretensioner cable. Over time, that misuse could weaken the mechanism designed to tighten the seat belt in a crash, increasing the risk of injury.
What Triggered the Recall
During internal reviews, Rivian engineers discovered evidence of damage linked to improper seat belt handling. Although the company has not recorded any injuries or accidents related to the defect, it opted for a voluntary recall out of caution.
The U.S. auto safety regulator explained that a compromised cable may fail to restrain the driver during an impact, making the recall necessary even in the absence of real-world incidents. Rivian noted that the affected systems could show wear when the buckle end is stressed repeatedly in ways the component was never designed to tolerate.
Rivian’s Fix: Software + Inspection
Rivian has already pushed out an over-the-air update to all impacted vans that adds a misuse detection feature. The software monitors how the belt is being handled and alerts the driver if the system senses unusual strain.
Beyond the software patch, Rivian will inspect the pretensioner assembly on recalled vehicles and replace it if needed. All work will be carried out at no cost to customers.
Vans built after early November already include the updated detection system from the factory, reducing the chance of misuse-related cable damage in future fleets.
Expanding Beyond Amazon
The recall comes at a time when Rivian’s commercial vehicle strategy is broadening. The automaker was initially tied to an exclusivity agreement requiring it to supply the electric vans solely to Amazon. That changed in late 2023 when Rivian renegotiated the deal, opening the door to new customers such as HelloFresh and other fleet operators.
With a larger buyer pool and a growing commercial footprint, resolving quality concerns quickly is a critical piece of Rivian’s long-term positioning in the EV delivery market.
How Investors and Retail Traders Reacted
Retail sentiment on Stocktwits leaned bearish in the 24 hours following the recall announcement, though message volume remained low. One user brushed off the development, noting that the primary fix is a software update a far less disruptive remedy than a full mechanical redesign.
Despite the muted reaction, the recall highlights Rivian’s ongoing effort to balance rapid scaling with tight oversight as it competes in an increasingly crowded EV arena.




