Actually Smart Summon sessions resulting in low-speed impacts.
NHTSA investigated and closed this without ordering a recall.
- Manufacturer
- Tesla, Inc.
- Component
- ELECTRICAL SYSTEM:ADAS:AUTONOMOUS/SELF DRIVING
- Opened
- Jan 6, 2025
- Closed
- Apr 3, 2026
- Model years
- 2016–2026
- Type
- Preliminary Evaluation
Summary
On January 6, 2025, the Office of Defects Investigations (ODI) opened Preliminary Evaluation 24003 (PE24033) to investigate Actually Smart Summon (Summon) sessions resulting in crashes during active sessions. According to Tesla, Summon is a short-distance SAE Level 2 system, controlled by the user from a cell phone within a certain distance and intended for use in parking lots and on private property. ODI analyzed complaint data provided by Tesla as well as complaints submitted to ODI from consumers to identify Summon incidents resulting in crashes. ODI's analysis indicates that almost all Summon reported crashes involved minor property damage claims with no reported incidents involving a vulnerable road user, injury, fatality, or major property damage as indicated by an air bag deployment or vehicle tow away. Out of millions of Summon sessions, a fraction of 1% resulted in an incident. Almost all those incidents took place where, typically early in a Summon session, the system or person using the app failed to fully detect or respond appropriately to vehicle surroundings resulting in minor impacts. Incidents took place when app users did not have a complete 360-degree view of the surroundings in the app to assess situational awareness. This limited the app userâs ability to determine whether an impact was imminent during initial vehicle maneuvers such as reversing in close proximity to an obstacle or a curb. ODI found that the impacts most often occurred with parking gates, adjacently parked vehicles, and short parking bollards. During this investigation, ODI identified two Summon crashes related to camera blockages. In both crashes, Summon attempted to navigate a snowy parking lot with snow partially or fully obstructing the forward-facing cameras. Summon did not detect the camera blockage and the vehicles collided with unoccupied parked vehicles while navigating the parking lot. App users in both instances did not command a vehicle stop or pause despite the obstructed camera visible in the camera stream in the app. On January 15, 2025, Tesla released Over-the-Air (OTA) Software (SW) Update Action numbers 578998 and 579185 for vehicles in service to implement a camera blockage detection condition. Both OTAs improve camera blockage detection mechanisms. Additionally, on January 20, 2025, and January 30, 2025, Tesla identified additional system requirements associated with camera visibility checks and released OTA SW-578752 and SW-580322, respectively. These firmware updates reduce false negative camera blockage detections due to snow or condensation. In its investigation, ODI identified one Summon incident where the vehicle did not yield for a gate arm blocking a garage exit lane and the app user did not command a vehicle stop or pause, resulting in an impact. On February 6, 2025, Tesla deployed OTA SW-578839 to improve vehicle reaction to dynamic gates. This OTA update upgraded vehicle perception systems through a high-fidelity occupancy determination network, which uses data from vehicle sensory systems to improve reconstruction of field objects with high accuracy. On November 20, 2025, Tesla further improved vehicle performance by adding object detections from a separate neural network through OTA SW-580514. Owners of the affected vehicles received all six OTA SW updates. Tesla also released these SW updates to production vehicles. See online public file for detailed descriptions of all six OTA SW updates. Due to low incident occurrence and low incident severity, this preliminary evaluation is closed. The closing of this investigation does not constitute a finding that a safety-related defect does not exist. The agency reserves the right to take additional action if warranted by future circumstances. For additional information regarding this investigation, see the complete online public file.
Vehicles under investigation (33)
- TESLA MODEL 32017
- TESLA MODEL 32018
- TESLA MODEL 32019
- TESLA MODEL 32020
- TESLA MODEL 32021
- TESLA MODEL 32023
- TESLA MODEL 32024
- TESLA MODEL 32025
- TESLA MODEL S2016
- TESLA MODEL S2017
- TESLA MODEL S2018
- TESLA MODEL S2019
- TESLA MODEL S2020
- TESLA MODEL S2021
- TESLA MODEL S2022
- TESLA MODEL S2023
- TESLA MODEL S2024
- TESLA MODEL S2025
- TESLA MODEL X2016
- TESLA MODEL X2017
- TESLA MODEL X2019
- TESLA MODEL X2021
- TESLA MODEL X2022
- TESLA MODEL X2023
- TESLA MODEL X2024
- TESLA MODEL X2025
- TESLA MODEL Y2020
- TESLA MODEL Y2021
- TESLA MODEL Y2022
- TESLA MODEL Y2023
- TESLA MODEL Y2024
- TESLA MODEL Y2025
- TESLA MODEL Y2026
Source: NHTSA investigation PE24033. Investigations are NHTSA's review of a potential safety issue and may or may not result in a recall.