Toyota Motor Corp. is recalling 162,000 trucks manufactured at the San Antonio South Side facility in connection with a safety issue tied to its multimedia display.

It’s the second Tundra recall in four months involving the pickup’s rearview display.

The latest recall involves model-year 2024 and 2025 gas-powered Tundras and Tundra hybrids.

“Under certain circumstances, the multimedia display may become stuck on a camera view or display a black image in the subject vehicles,” Toyota said in a news release. If that happens, it may prevent the display from showing the rearview image while the pickup is in reverse, increasing the risk of an accident.

READ MORE: Toyota recalls nearly 400,000 San Antonio-made Tundras and Sequoias

Trucks that fail to display the rearview image while in reverse may not meet the federal safety standard.

Toyota dealers will update the multimedia display software for free. All owners of affected trucks should be notified about the recall by late March.

The announcement is on a smaller scale than the October recall of nearly 400,000 San Antonio-made vehicles. That recall involved gas-powered and hybrid Toyota Tundras from 2022 through 2025 as well as hybrid Sequoias from model years 2023 through 2025.

Similar to the current recall, it involved a defective rearview display. The malfunctioning rearview camera caused the screen to show a green or black display while the vehicles were in reverse.

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To find out whether your truck is part of either recall, visit the Toyota website or the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration website. You’ll need to enter your vehicle identification number, or VIN, or license plate information. Toyota also offers customer support over the phone at 800-331-4331.

Both Tundra models saw a dip in annual sales in 2025, with sales down 4% to 117,061 of the gas-powered model. Sales of the hybrid model dropped 7.5%, selling nearly 6,500 fewer units in 2025 compared with the previous year.

This article originally published at Toyota recalling 162,000 San Antonio-made Tundra trucks over rearview display glitch.