NHTSA Owner Complaint Log
This page lists owner-reported complaints filed with NHTSA for the 2023 Hyundai Ioniq 5. Complaints are unverified consumer reports submitted to NHTSA and do not by themselves prove a defect or defect rate.
Was driving the car and electrical system failure alert came on. Could not drive over 20 miles an hour on highway and then car just died once I got on side street
Have had 2-12v battery issues and now an ICCU failure with about 28 days at the dealership with no parts to repair. Seems to a common issue popping up
Our 2023 Hyundai Ioniq 5 went completely dead on the evening of [XXX]. There were no warning signs/messages prior to it. It just would not start and none of the electrical systems (dashboard, lights etc) worked either. We became aware of the recall involving defective ICCU causing depletion of the 12 volt battery. We called nearby dealerships but their service departments were closed because it was the weekend. On Monday January 13, 2025, we were able to get in touch with the Hyundai dealership in El Monte, CA. Their service personnel instructed us to jump start the car and bring it in for service, which we did around 8am the same day. Around 2:30pm, we received a call from the El Monte dealership saying that they are not able to address the issues with our car because the dealership who sold us the car (Garden Grove Hyundai), had installed/wired a non-factory-certified GPS device (LoJack) into our car (unbeknownst to us), which was interfering with troubleshooting. The El Monte service person recommended that the car be transferred to the Garden Grove Hyundai dealership. He also stated that he would not recommend driving the car to the Garden Grove dealership since it may pose a safety risk. He said that it's possible that the car may suddenly die without warning while we are driving. We spoke with Hyundai roadside assistance, Hyundai customer care, and then the Garden Grove dealership, only to be told that it is not their responsibility to transfer the car, despite it being a safety risk to drive the car. The Garden Grove service person kept insisting that it's safe to drive the car and to just drive it over, which made us extremely uncomfortable. Nobody has taken ownership/responsibility for what has happened and the customer service has been awful. We have wasted the entire afternoon of January 13, 2025 being on numerous phone calls with no resolution in sight. INFORMATION REDACTED PURSUANT TO THE FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT (FOIA), 5 U.S.C. 552(B)(6)
iccu failure. Hyundai may be trying to hide data as they are not processing this as a recall but just as a warranty service. battery light Turner on and car went on a crawl mode. I had the car towed to dealer and they confirmed it needed a new iccu. my new 3 month 12v. battery was ruined and they refused to replace as it was not from factory. this is my second 12v battery in one year. after replacing the iccu, the fuse blew. please see that hyundai is not hiding crucial data from the public
ICCU failed while charging. Vehicle showed no diagnostic codes to indicate the problem. All recent recalls regarding the ICCU performed on the vehicle.
There was no major safety issue in this instance. My concern is this poses a severe risk if it happened while driving. The car was on and in ready to drive mode but was parked in the garage with climate control on while loading it for going to school. At somepoint between trips to the car over 20 minutes it died with no warning. Some lights behind buttons, the interior lights, and the screens were on but blank. Not a single button in the car would respond. Including hazards or opening the trunk or closing the charging port door. Lights like the LED for the overhead light button blinked and the charging indicator by the charging port blinked a pattern of 1 longer flash and 8 shorter flashes. The car would not shut off or on again another button that was completely unresponsive. The lights and screen stayed on for at least 30 minutes before I left with a Lyft to get the kids to school. An hour and a half later everything was off and it seemed to have no power. At that point I did figure out how to jump it and get it to the dealer. The dealer claims the 12V battery died and that was the only issue and completed the 2 open recalls. There was no indication when I started the car that anything was wrong or the 12v battery was low or needed replacing. There are apparently no error codes from it completely failing while in ready mode. I was only told this happened because it was in park and the 12V battery failed while it was on and parked, if I had been driving I would still have use of the vehicle as the recall outlined for a failed ICCU when the 12V battery drains. They can find nothing else wrong but my concern is that a failed 12V battery could cause this while driving. I was told simply it cannot happen because the software handles it differently when driving. I hope that is correct.
This car has had several recalls. On 12/9/24 I brought it to dealer re the ICCU update. Apparently what was done was just a software update. On 1/8/25 while driving 50 mph, the car suddenly lost power in traffic. Flat bedded to the dealer, they had to replace the ICCU. Todays Consumer Reports states that the ICCU recall was to replace the ICCU. Clearly the software update or check FAILED, putting me and other motorists at risk that night. I always thought a recall was a repair/replace situation, not an update/check situation. Being told by the service mgr that after all, it's a $3000 part, so if it's OK they don't just replace it. Huh? What? Not replacing it as a recalled problem is a problem. Their software update failed clearly, and now I'm afraid to use the car other than locally. The warning lamps came on only as soon as power was lost and slimply said "check electrical system". No warning BEFORE the event. I think the manufacturer's solution is a non solution, ineffective and dangerous to the motorists. In addition, I got the 4 or 5 recalls already on this car I've had for under 2 years now from my insurance company, not from Hyundai. What's with that? I would be happy to speak with someone about this. I've called the manufacturer and they read to me off of a script.
Condensation builds in front of the camera. The car starts jerking all over the road with no warning. There is no error other than noticing that the car cannot keep itself in the lane. When trying to disable the features, they get turned back on automatically.
Several days ago, the twelve volt battery on my car was replaced because the car just suddenly died overnight while sitting in my garage. They told me that the battery needed to be replaced when I went to the dealer. They replaced it and now less than a week later, I was driving on the highway and suddenly the car Slowed to no more than 27 miles an hour with warnings about the electrical system not working and a problem with the battery. I had to put my flashers on while I was driving down the highway until I was able to pull off and have the car towed to another dealer that was closer to the scene. Not sure what they are going to say, but obviously this was very scary as well as a nuisance.
ICCU failed, leaving the car incapacitated and driver stranded. Car was towed to the dealership and repaired under warranty.
Hyundai service department confirmed the ICCU needs to be replaced but is on back order for 5-6 weeks
I was sitting in my parked vehicle, which I had just turned on. It was cold so I turned on the seat warmer. About a minute later, I hear a pop and saw a “check electric vehicle system” warning on my dash, followed by an audible alarm and a new “stop vehicle and check power supply” warning on the dash. I decided to have the vehicle towed to my local Hyundai dealer.
While driving on a 45 mph speed limit road, there was a "pop" noise and then alarms on the dash display that power was limited and stop the car. The car's speed was severely limited to about 10 mph for a few seconds while I pulled the car over, and then the car died. Everything was electrically dead. I couldn't even turn on the hazard lights or lock or unlock the car. I took a video of the dash display rapidly alternating between two alarm messages, "12V battery storage low. Stop safely." and "power limited." This website wouldn't let me upload the video, so I saved screen shots of the two alarm messages from the video. Shortly after I stopped the car, it all went dead. It scares me to think what would have happened if I had been on the interstate when this occurred.
We were driving our vehicle in a parking lot while on vacation and we got an error message “check electric vehicle system”. It then displayed the error message “stop safely and check power supply”. Four months ago, we had the same problem and had our 12 volt battery replaced and our ICCU updated. Our vehicle lost power while we were driving. We were able to drive the car safely to a hotel. But the ICCU needs to be replaced.
The manufacturer sent me a letter about a recall and in the letter stated that this should be fixed promptly because the defect could increase the risk of a crash. I called my local dealership and they could not provide me with an appoinment for 3 months. When I told them that I was worried about risk of crash they dismissed that and told me that they had not heard of a crash from this problem. I called Hyundai and filed a complaint, case #[XXX]. They also called the dealership and they could not get a sooner appointment but they offer for me to drop the car off and leave it for 7-10 days and they would get to it when they could. They would not give me a loaner car, that would be at my expense. I feel that this delay could potentially cause me to have an accident and injure myself and possibly others. In order to get it done sooner it would cost me a rental car. This repair is supposed to be done in a timely fashion and at no expense to me. Hyundai could not resolve my issue. The local dealership is Crown Hyundai in St Petersburg FL where I purchased the vehicle. INFORMATION REDACTED PURSUANT TO THE FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT (FOIA), 5 U.S.C. 552(B)(6)
My vehicle will not charge with my Chargepoint Home Charger. It only charges on a DC High capacity charger. I have completed all of the recalls at the dealership where I purchased the car. The service manager told me the vehicle is unsafe to drive. It has been at the dealership for two weeks while waiting for a backordered ICCU. The repair will take place upon receipt of the part. I have no faith that the repair will work. In any case I am now afraid to drive the vehicle even if the dealer says it is repaired.
I was driving the car 70 miles per hour in a highway. Car suddenly stopped and only go 5 mph. I was lucky no car behind me. If not I could be death today. I brought it to service and ICCU unit failed which is happened almost all Hyundai IONIQ 5. They replaced it with same ICCU and it will happen again. I think they want me to make an accident next time. This car is not safe to drive with this charging unit.
The rear video camera fails intermittently. It works sometimes and doesn't at times. The same with the rear cross traffic warning and pedestrian warning. I've taken my car to the dealer service center but they claim to not being able to reproduce the issue. I know the issue still exists since my husband hit a parked car while backing out of a driveway since there was no alert provided and the rear camera did not work.
The ICCU failed, leaving the car with a Check Electrical System failure and ultimately cutting power to the vehicle, forcing driver to pull over and stop.
I started my car and after a minute I received a warning saying to check my electrical system and safely pull over. After 5 minutes of trying to drive to the dealership the car suddenly slowed down to a max speed of 27mph and then shortly after slowed to a stop and turned off. The car would not turn on and eventually the 12v battery died. I tried to jump the car but the 12v would not stay charged long enough to put the vehicle into drive. It appears the ICCU is not working and cannot keep the 12v charged to make the car function .
Car lost power due to electrical supply--12v/ICCU failure. Warning on dash instructed me to stop vehicle immediately. Car is currently at dealership and inoperable.
The lower control arm broke off of the subframe during daily commute on the highway, which left the car completely immobilized and had to be towed. The incident could've been a lot worse if I had lost control of the car and swerved into others on the road. vehicle is currently being inspected by Hyundai dealership. Prior to the incident, there were no warning lights or symptoms.
Vehicle disengaged lane keeping ADAS without warning multiple times. Sometimes a warning beep would occur, but often on turns it would suddenly disengage without a beep or any other warning method causing me to have to yank the wheel to complete the turn correctly and avoid running off the road. This has caused me to not trust the system and fight the lane keeping feature just in case it suddenly turns off and goes into the other lane before I have a chance to correct the steering.
The contact owns a 2023 Hyundai Ioniq 5. The contact stated while driving at an undisclosed speed, the vehicle lost motive power with several unknown warning lights illuminated. The vehicle was towed to the dealer. The vehicle was not diagnosed or repaired. The manufacturer was made aware of the failure and a case was opened. The approximate failure mileage was 6,500. The VIN was not available.
During normal driving with car charged to 95%, I heard a pop coming from the rear of the vehicle and saw an immediate warning about electrical system malfunction. I drove the car for less than a quarter mile and pulled over. I then received instruction on the dash to power off the car which I did. The car was towed to the dealership who diagnosed an ICCU failure. It had been to the dealer twice for safety recall notices related to the same issue. This is a known problem with this type of vehicle. Awaiting replacement parts. This problem will cause complete loss of power to the vehicle. Fortunately I was able to pull over and park in a safe space before this happened. Obviously complete loss of power is a potential safety issue, thankfully systems alerted me to the problem. I have no idea if the replacement part will be of the same lot that failed in the first place.
There seems to be a wide spread issue with the foam on the interior of Ionic 5 tires, Michelin 235/55/R 19. The foam dislodges from the interior of the tire and causes severe vibrations when driving at over 60 mph. The issue causes the tires to be unbalanced and can cause damage to the car. Wondering why Michelin doesn't address this issue and issue a fix other than stripping the tires of foam. My Hyundai dealer told me this is an on going issue and they have received no guidance from Michelin or Hyundai.
It is regularly very difficult to see the digital speedometer on this car because it is blocked by the steering wheel. There is almost no comfortable position to place the seat and steering wheel for someone of my height 6ft where the speedometer is visible. Please make Hyundai move the speedometer to the middle of the screen (not outside edges where it is blocked by the steering wheel)!! I have contacted them and they have essentially gaslit/ignored me about this.
Power limited message show when driving on highway then drop the speed and stop need to turn off the car and turn back on the everything back to normal. So scary
Our all-electric AWD Hyundai Ioniq 5 has an issue where the rear motor electric oil pump (EOP) overheats and ceases to function when the problem occurs, which disables the rear motor and effectively causes the car to become a front-wheel drive vehicle with a "hesitation" in the acceleration. This problem only occurs after a long time of high-speed driving and typically on a warm day (upwards of 70-80 degrees F). When the problem occurs, the rear motor ceases to function at all and only the front motor operates to power the vehicle forward. The acceleration is also impacted, such that when the accelerator is pushed, the car "hesitates" for 1-3 seconds before the front motor takes over the demand for power and "lurches" the car forward in a jerky motion. The symptom will last as long as the car is in an overheated state. However, if you pull the car over and let it rest for a period of time (undetermined), the rear motor will again operate normally until it overheats again. For us, this occurred once on a very hot day traveling approximately 50-60 miles on interstate travelling at speeds over 70 MPH. On another occurrence, it happened after driving the car about 200 miles (stopping for a lunch break in the middle), for about 4 hours. When this problem occurs in other cars equipped with RWD only, they lose all forward power in the car and coast to a stop even when the battery still has a charge. We've taken it to our local dealership for repair on Sept 12, 2024 (McGee Hyundai of Barre, VT) and they claim that there is nothing wrong with the vehicle. After researching the topic, I've determined it is the failing rear EOP must be replaced [XXX] and [XXX] INFORMATION REDACTED PURSUANT TO THE FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT (FOIA), 5 U.S.C. 552(B)(6)
Due to an extreme failure in the integrity of the OEM tires, the vehicle experienced violent shaking a speeds in excess of 45mph. The shaking resulted from the extreme unbalanced nature of the wheels due to displaced noise-isolating foam inside the tire. As these tires were installed when the new vehicle was purchased, there is a significant issue with the fact that none of the dealership service stations visited to address this issue could identify a problem. Additionally, all three dealerships refused to work on the tires or help address an obvious problem for a vehicle with only 6,400 miles. While the warranty for the tires lies with Michelin, the complete lack of response or care by Hyundai representatives on a component with such a high failure rate is extremely unnerving and problematic.
On [XXX], while driving north on [XXX] to Michigan, I stopped in Carmel, IN to charge my 2023 Hyundai Ioniq 5 SE RWD vehicle. After charging, I reached 45mph and immediately experienced violent shaking of the steering wheel and seats. The vehicle was immediately driven to Hyundai of Carmel for inspection and possible maintenance. A service technician drove the vehicle and experienced the issue, but could not recommend a solution. The vehicle was driven back to Louisville, KY (home location) and taken to a Tire Discounters the following morning. At Tire Discounters, a technician drove the vehicle and experienced the same behavior, but could not provide a solution. Numerous trips to multiple Hyundai dealership service departments and tire service centers (Big-O-Tires and Tire Discounters) resulted in no solutions. After extensive research, a potential solution was identified by the vehicle owner relating to the noise-isolating foam located on the inside wall of the tires. There are numerous reviews on Michelin's website documenting this specific issue with the tires. A call to Michelin costumer service successfully concluded with a warranty claims number. However, none of the previously mentioned tire service locations would investigate because the vehicle only had 6,400 miles and the Hyundai dealership service departments refused to address the problem. Ultimately, Pep Boys accepted the Michelin warranty claim and found that three of four tires (Michelin Primacy 235/55R19 101H) that came as part of the original vehicle purchase had the internal isolation foam disconnect from the tire belt and gather in a central location inside the tire. There has been no evidence of notices or information from Michelin to dealerships or service departments regarding this issue and the potential for dangerous driving conditions or damage. INFORMATION REDACTED PURSUANT TO THE FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT (FOIA), 5 U.S.C. 552(B)(6)
The recall stated in this report says that it was incomplete, however the recall was completed by the Hyundai Dealership, the software updates were installed and the ICCU failed anyway. When the unit failed the car went into "Turtle Mode", only able to go a max of 25 mph, and the 12 volt battery drained and died.
Incident occurred when head-in parking in a space pointed into an stores exterior wall. There were no parking/wheel stops, just pavement then wall. No adjacent cars. I was decelerating with foot completely off accelerator and over the brake pedal. The car is an EV and was in 3rd level of regenerative braking, slowing down quickly. As I completed the turn into the space and began straitening the wheel, the car suddenly and rapidly accelerated and crashed into the wall. The only likely explanation I have is that I inadvertently pressed the Driving Assist button with my right thumb or hand while turning the steering wheel, which would have activated Smart Cruise Control, and, if the necessary conditions were met, set the minimum speed to 30 km/hr. The car manual states: "If your vehicle speed is between 0 - 20 mph (0 - 30 km/h) when you press the Driving Assist ( ) button, the Smart Cruise Control speed will be set to 20 mph (30km/h)." The Foward Collision-Avoidance Assist was set to Active Assist, which should have applied the brake to stop from colliding with the wall, but instead the car accelerated. (Note, the parking assist feature does not usually recognize head-in parking.) The car has two Driving Assist settings: Based on Drive Mode and Based on Driving Style. If the latter is selected, three additional features are set on sliding scales: Distance (close to far), Acceleration (slow to fast), Response Speed (slow to quick). These three settings are adjusted automatically based on the car's interpretation of the driver's driving style, or they can be manually overriden. I have never changed these settings. Post-incident I checked the setting and it was set to Based on Driving Style with Acceleration=Fast. Concerns: Is Driving Assist to easy to inadvertently activate? Should Driving Assist not activate at very slow speeds and not auto-set to 30k/h? Why did Forward Collision-Avoidance not activate? Drive Assist should not default to Based on Driving Style.
Received a code: DTC P1AA600 And did some research and was made aware that the EV battery needs to be exchanged out for a new one.
Hyundai Ioniq5 acquired new in September 2023 - mileage at the time of incident 10,800 miles - Michelin Primacy AS 235/55 R19 - OEM tires installed by the manufacturer. Front tire started to go off balance causing steering wheel vibrations and shaking that increased with speed - car was not drivable above 55MPH due to excessive shaking and vibrations of steering wheel - this presents safety concern as it may lead to loss of control and excessive wear and tear on other suspension / wheel components. I took the vehicle to a local tire shop (Town Fair Tire in Norwalk CT - authorized dealer of Michelin tires) - got wheels rotated, balances and alignment adjusted. The issue persisted - on the second visit tire shop dismounted one of the tires and discovered internal foam band unglued and clumped on one side of the tire causing off-balance. The shop recommended removal of the foam material and rebalancing of the tire to correct the manufacturing error. I contacted Hyundai and reported this as a safety issue as well.
Michelin Primacy AS 235/55 R19 - OEM tires on Hyundai Ioniq5 acquired new in September 2023 - mileage at the time of incident 10,800 miles Front tire started went off balance causing steering wheel vibrations and shaking that increased with speed - car was not drivable above 55MPH due to excessive shaking and vibrations of steering wheel - this presents safety concern as it may lead to loss of control and excessive wear and tear on other suspension / wheel components. I took the vehicle to a local tire shop (Town Fair Tire in Norwalk CT - authorized dealer of Michelin tires) - got wheels rotated, balances and alignment adjusted. The issue persisted - on the second visit tire shop dismounted one of the tires and discovered internal foam band unglued and clumped on one side of the tire causing off-balance. The shop recommended removal of the foam material and rebalancing of the tire to correct the manufacturing error.
I have had my 2023 Ioniq 5 for 13-months. I have had two safety recall services performed - I understand those were ICCU software related. On [XXX] my car sounded a sudden alarm and a warning appeared saying to "STOP and Check Power Supply." I was not able to immediately pull over but found the ability to pull over within about 1/4 mile, the vehicle seemed to be losing power. It was frightening as there were many pedestrians and cyclists and I had no idea what was happening. The car was towed through AAA - we had difficulty getting it onto the truck as there was very little power and almost no power steering. The vehicle is now at the Rowe Hyundai dealership in Westbrook, ME. I was told the ICCU would need to be replaced as well as some kind of fuse. I am not sure I will feel safe driving this vehicle even after it is repaired. INFORMATION REDACTED PURSUANT TO THE FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT (FOIA), 5 U.S.C. 552(B)(6)
Charging port burned during DC fast charging session, resulting in melted charging pin. Unable to insert CCS connecter due to melted pin obstructing insertion. Further damage to electrical systems unknown. No warning signs shown aside from vehicle charging session ending. Lack of safety systems to prevent melting/burning of charging pins leaves potential for general vehicle fire, battery fire, etc. Dealer has had car in possession for over 10 days with no update. Corporate contact has been unresponsive.
12 volt battery dies after 2 years. Car is not starting and could stop working if it dies while being driven. The dealer replaced it But does not know why it died. I called the manufacturer but they were no help either.
See attached document for complaint.
Latest recall had been applied, 2 weeks later a dead 12V. New one put in and 4 weeks later a pop and an immediate pull over vehicle charging system needs inspected. ICCU failure.
Failure of the Vehicle Power Supply system. ICCU failure. Car was alerting and would not go over 24mph. This is the result of a recall that I had already brought in the vehicle for in April, but they only performed a Pass/Fail test and at the time it "passed" so they didn't replace the ICCU and fuse that is required to be replaced. Two months later the car died, had to be towed and now has been at the dealership for two weeks already - 17waiting for the parts to come in. This is ridiculous because Hyundai is aware of this problem and is not fixing the issue, merely kicking the can down the road and then stranding owners for weeks without their vehicles. Unacceptable.
My ICCU failed and left my family and I stranded. I understand that this is happening on many Ioniq 5s and that Hyundai has not come up with a reliable solution for this problem.
The car has had multiple recalls for the ICCU failure. I have brought the car in been 3 times. Will go in again this week . The recall remedy never fixes the issue. The car works for a few weeks then the same issue happens again .Unable to start the car or drive . Has been going on since June 2024.
My car has 16000 miles and originally came with this exact tire brand. Apparently, because I drive an electric vehicle the tires have sound dampening foam on the inside of them. They are supposed to break down slowly with time however the last four months I have had two incidents where the foam became unglued from the rest of the tire, balled up, and caused a huge amount of shake in the car as I drove at speed 60 mph or higher. It did not affect low speeds. This is a safety hazard. The first time it occurred, I considered an outlier and Michigan did replace the tire. The second time it happened , only a few thousand miles later I asked that the foam be removed from the tire as I am concerned that this is a safety hazard moving forward. Michelin needs to have this tire recalled. I asked the Hyundai dealership if other ionic five drivers with the same tires had come in with the same issues. They said absolutely we see it every day. Why is this tire still on the road. I reached out to Michelin and they Refused to refer me onto anybody to discuss this further. They also refused to pay for the foam removal process. That is why I’ve decided to involve you. Please feel free to contact me at [XXX] to discuss further. Thank you for your consideration, [XXX] INFORMATION REDACTED PURSUANT TO THE FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT (FOIA), 5 U.S.C. 552(B)(6)
Vehicle's charging port appears to be overheating to the point that thermal throttling is occurring when attempting to charge. This issue first occurred in mid-May of 2024. Vehicle charged as normal before then. Vehicle was serviced by dealership for this issue on 05/29/2024. A software update was applied that did not solve the problem. In an attempt to find updates on this problem, I contacted Hyundai Customer Care by phone on 05/30/2024. Hyundai Customer Care agent read a scripted response that was first released to the public in 20203 and advised to wait for an unknown amount of time for an unknown fix which may or may not come to pass. Hyundai Customer Care had no updates more recent than the 2023 release from which the Customer Care agent read. This appears to be a known issue with no actual fix available to the customer and no ETA on when such a fix might be released.
The integrated control unit (ICCU) failed immediately after getting the safety recall software installation. Recall maintenance that morning, ICCU failed that afternoon. Heard an audible pop and then multiple warnings went off. Fortunately I was in a location where I could pull over safely, and in a location where I could get help easily.
[XXX] - Took Hyundai IONIQ 5 to All Star Hyundai Pittsburg for servicing and recall issue. [XXX]: Saw an error reading CHECK ELECTRIC VEHICLE SYSTEM! on the IONIQ 5, after which a BlueLink rep was connected and stated I needed to take the car to a dealership ASAP. No appt available until July so advised to take car back to All Star. Called All Star and spoke to Josh who said there were no appts until [XXX]. Arrived All Star 9:15. I stayed until 3:15 with a lot of back and forth on diagnostics, warranty, how long for repair etc. Called Hyundai Customer Care and spoke Stephen who said the car was purchased less than a year and it would be under warranty for repair. I spoke to David, Manager All Star, who said he does not know when the diagnostics will be complete/ when car would be ready. Told me to go to Enterprise and get a rental at my own expense. Went to Enterprise Pittsburg in an Uber paid for by All Star. When I got there no cars available. Called All Star multiple times NO ANSWER. Took an Uber back to All Star to retrieve items in car and took Uber home at my own expense. Wednesday, went to Enterprise to obtain rental at my own expense and returned to All Star. They said they were waiting on Rep to further review the car. Today is May 28th and my right knee is now very painful and irritated from driving the rental as the 1st one had broken drivers seat and the 2nd one is still too low. I have spoken to All Star and Hyundai Customer Care to please provide a car rental similar to IONIQ 5 and I have received no assistance. I have spent almost $2000 on Ubers, rentals and gas. Hyundai still has not covered my rental expenses. I have spoken to approximately 16 reps of these companies and have received very few call backs or assistance. Today I called Hyundai Motor Finance to discuss monthly payments for a non-working car at All Star and was transferred and placed on a lengthy hold. No one returned to the phone call. I am seeking your immediate assistance. INFORMATION REDACTED PURSUANT TO THE FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT (FOIA), 5 U.S.C. 552(B)(6)
Driving on hwy with 80% charge when we left the house. Loud pop, and complete loss of power in a very dangerous portion of a highway with our baby in the backseat. Almost not able to control vehicle to side of road
The contact owns a 2023 Hyundai Ioniq 5. The contact received notification of NHTSA Campaign Number: 24V204000 (Electrical System) however, the part to do the recall repair was not yet available. The contact stated while driving 40 MPH, the message "Stop Car - Check Power Supply" was displayed. The contact pulled over to the side of the road, and her husband met her at the location. The contact stated that after her husband restarted the vehicle, a message advising to drive was displayed. The contact stated while her husband was driving 30 MPH, the vehicle decelerated to 20 MPH and stalled. The contact's husband was unable to restart the vehicle. The vehicle was towed to the residence. The local dealer was contacted and informed the contact that the earliest availability for the recall repair was June 10, 2024. The vehicle was not diagnosed or repaired. The contact stated that the manufacturer had exceeded a reasonable amount of time for the recall repair. The manufacturer was made aware of the failure but was unable to assist the contact in locating a dealer who had the part for the recall repair. The failure mileage was unknown. Parts distribution disconnect.
Data synced from NHTSA on May 4, 2026