Premium family SUVs just got a serious safety reality check. Kia has recalled 568 units of its 2027 Telluride Hybrid’s top trims after power seats failed to detect obstructions—including children.
Dangerous Seats Target Luxury Models
Only the most expensive Telluride Hybrid trims face this crushing hazard.
The recall affects SX Prestige and X-Line SX Prestige models equipped with the Executive Package. These premium seats feature one-touch tilt-and-slide and power-folding mechanisms designed for easier third-row access.
The problem? They “may not detect obstructions and may continue to move if used while an occupant is in the seat or entering/exiting the rear,” according to Kia’s NHTSA filing.
Your $55,000+ family hauler’s convenience feature becomes a trap when those sensors malfunction.
Dealers Scramble as Sales Freeze
Stop-sale orders halt deliveries while engineers develop fixes.
Kia issued immediate stop-sale orders to dealers, effectively pulling these models from showrooms until repairs arrive. Current owners face stark guidance: avoid using power second-row seats when children are present, and don’t accidentally press switches during loading.
The remedy remains under development, with owner notifications promised by May 19, 2026. That timeline feels like an eternity when your toddler could be at risk.
Hyundai’s Tragedy Casts Shadow
A fatal Ohio incident reveals this platform’s deadly potential.
This recall follows Hyundai’s devastating wake-up call. The related Palisade—sharing Kia’s platform—killed a 2-year-old in Ohio on March 7, 2026, prompting a massive recall 69,000+ unit recall. Hyundai also reported four injuries and 17 complaints from similar seat failures.
Kia’s situation looks relatively contained with no reported injuries yet, but the underlying anti-pinch protection flaw spans both brands. Like finding out your neighborhood’s foundation contractor cut corners on every house.
Premium Features, Basic Safety Gaps
Executive Package buyers paid extra for potentially dangerous convenience.
The irony stings: families upgrading to Executive Package trim specifically wanted safer, easier third-row access. Instead, they got seats that might not stop crushing whatever gets in their way. Only these top-tier models carry the problematic power seats—base Telluride Hybrids remain unaffected.
Check your VIN if you own affected models, and treat those power seat controls like loaded weapons until Kia delivers its fix. Premium pricing shouldn’t come with crush risk disclaimers.





























