Maserati recall: FMVSS 108 headlamp compliance fix in US
Maserati recalls nearly 10,000 vehicles for FMVSS 108 headlamp compliance
Maserati recall: FMVSS 108 headlamp compliance fix in US
FCA US recalls nearly 10,000 Maserati GranTurismo, GranCabrio and Grecale to fix FMVSS 108 headlamp compliance; free dealer repair, notices start Dec 12, 2025.
2025-10-31T01:35:51+03:00
2025-10-31T01:35:51+03:00
2025-10-31T01:35:51+03:00
FCA US LLC, part of Stellantis, has announced a recall of nearly 10,000 Maserati vehicles in the United States over noncompliance with FMVSS 108, the federal standard that governs headlamp design. The campaign covers the GranTurismo coupe, the GranCabrio convertible, and the Grecale SUV built from June 2022 through September 2025.The issue stems from a missing protective cap on the low-beam horizontal adjustment mechanism in certain vehicles. That detail runs afoul of U.S. regulations; and while it doesn’t change how the headlights function, it can still lead to a compliance failure during inspection. In essence, this is more about meeting the letter of the law than fixing illumination performance, but FMVSS 108 is exacting for a reason, and Maserati is moving to align with it.The component supplier is Marelli Automotive Lighting Italy, and authorized Maserati dealers will install corrective parts at no charge. Owner notifications are scheduled to begin on December 12, 2025. For drivers, the key takeaway is straightforward: the remedy is covered, and the brand is addressing a regulatory detail before it turns into a bigger headache at inspection time.
FCA US recalls nearly 10,000 Maserati GranTurismo, GranCabrio and Grecale to fix FMVSS 108 headlamp compliance; free dealer repair, notices start Dec 12, 2025.
Michael Powers, Editor
FCA US LLC, part of Stellantis, has announced a recall of nearly 10,000 Maserati vehicles in the United States over noncompliance with FMVSS 108, the federal standard that governs headlamp design. The campaign covers the GranTurismo coupe, the GranCabrio convertible, and the Grecale SUV built from June 2022 through September 2025.
The issue stems from a missing protective cap on the low-beam horizontal adjustment mechanism in certain vehicles. That detail runs afoul of U.S. regulations; and while it doesn’t change how the headlights function, it can still lead to a compliance failure during inspection. In essence, this is more about meeting the letter of the law than fixing illumination performance, but FMVSS 108 is exacting for a reason, and Maserati is moving to align with it.
The component supplier is Marelli Automotive Lighting Italy, and authorized Maserati dealers will install corrective parts at no charge. Owner notifications are scheduled to begin on December 12, 2025. For drivers, the key takeaway is straightforward: the remedy is covered, and the brand is addressing a regulatory detail before it turns into a bigger headache at inspection time.