Title 49 › Subtitle SUBTITLE VI— MOTOR VEHICLE AND DRIVER PROGRAMS › Part A— GENERAL › Chapter 301— MOTOR VEHICLE SAFETY › Subchapter II— STANDARDS AND COMPLIANCE › § 30121
The Secretary of Transportation can make a vehicle maker send a temporary safety notice when the Secretary has decided a safety defect or rule violation exists but the maker is fighting that decision in court. The temporary notice must say the Secretary found a defect, explain why, describe the safety risk, list steps needed to avoid danger, say the maker will fix the problem for free if the court upholds the decision, and include any other required details. Sending the temporary notice does not excuse a maker from any other required notices. If a maker fails to notify owners and buyers as required, it can be fined unless it wins the court case or a judge blocks enforcement because the failure was reasonable and the maker is likely to win; if a judge blocks enforcement, no fines apply during the block. Failing to send the temporary notice can bring fines even if the maker later wins. If the Secretary wins the court case, the maker must tell owners, buyers, and dealers the outcome, set the earliest date when free repairs will start, and pay back owners for reasonable repair costs they had between the time the temporary notice should have been sent and when they got the outcome notice, up to the amount the Secretary allowed earlier. Lawsuits over these orders must be filed in the federal district where the maker is incorporated or in Washington, D.C.; the court may move or combine related cases for good cause.
Full Legal Text
Transportation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
49 U.S.C. § 30121
Title 49 — Transportation
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60