Toyota Australia recalls nearly 70,000 vehicles including RAV4 Hybrid and Corolla

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The fault affecting tens of thousands of popular Toyotas could cause the digital instrument cluster to malfunction and not display any driving information, according to the recall notice.


Tung Nguyen
Toyota Australia recalls nearly 70,000 vehicles including RAV4 Hybrid and Corolla

Toyota Australia has recalled 69,586 examples of its 2022-2025 Toyota C-HR, Camry, Corolla, Corolla Cross, GR Corolla, GR Yaris, Kluger, and RAV4 models, citing a potential fault with the 12.3-inch digital instrument cluster.

The affected vehicles were built between July 2022 and April 2025, but not all vehicles made during this period are affected, and some may have been sold at a later date.

The recall notice, published by Toyota Australia, says: "There is a possibility that the display can be blank when the vehicle starts and will remain in this state."

Date of recall notice15 July 2025
MakeToyota
ModelC-HR Hybrid, Camry Hybrid, Corolla Hatch Hybrid, Corolla Sedan Hybrid, Corolla Hatch petrol, Corolla Sedan petrol, Corolla Cross Hybrid, Corolla Cross petrol, GR Yaris, GR Corolla, Kluger petrol, Kluger Hybrid, RAV4 petrol, RAV4 Hybrid
Year2022-2025
Vehicles affected69,586
VIN listClick here to download the list of affected VINs
Contact linkClick here to contact the manufacturer

The fault, according to Toyota Australia, can be caused "due to improper programming of the combination meter" which could cause "the memory device to deteriorate earlier than intended".

Without a digital instrument cluster display, "driving without [a] speedometer and any warning may result in an increased risk of an accident in certain driving conditions," said Toyota in a media statement.

However, the car brand also states that "you can continue to drive your vehicle" and, if the fault occurs, contact the nearest Toyota dealership.

A full list of vehicle identification numbers for the 69,586 vehicles involved in the recall can be found here.

Toyota Australia advises affected owners to contact their local Toyota dealership to remedy the fault, which requires an update to the instrument cluster software.

The repair is due to take between one and 2.5 hours, depending on model, and will be carried out at no charge to owners.

Toyota Australia also warns that "depending on the dealer's works schedule, owners may be required to make the vehicle available for a longer period of time".

Owners can contact Toyota via the Recall Campaign Helpline on 1800 987 366 between the hours of 8:00am and 6:00pm, Monday to Friday.

Alternatively, to have your vehicle checked, find your closest Toyota dealership by clicking here.

Tung Nguyen

Tung Nguyen has been in the automotive journalism industry for over a decade, cutting his teeth at various publications before finding himself at Drive in 2024. With experience in news, feature, review, and advice writing, as well as video presentation skills, Tung is a do-it-all content creator. Tung’s love of cars first started as a child watching Transformers on Saturday mornings, as well as countless hours on PlayStation’s Gran Turismo, meaning his dream car is a Nissan GT-R, with a Liberty Walk widebody kit, of course.

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