Summary
The Land Rover LR4 has 10 recalls spanning the 2010 to 2016 production run, with the most serious being a cracked fuel outlet flange on 2010–2016 models equipped with 3.0L V6 or 5.0L V8 engines that can leak fuel and start a fire.
The 2016 model year has a separate concern: the driver's frontal airbag may not inflate correctly in a crash due to a malformed canister, reducing protection for the driver. On 2015 models, a software error in the anti-lock brake system can disable the electronic stability control, traction control, roll stability control, and hill descent control simultaneously, leaving the driver without those safety systems. There is also a related issue on 2015 vehicles equipped with a front center console cooled cubby box, where a fault registers at shutdown and the stability and traction control systems are dark when the vehicle restarts. The panoramic roof on 2012–2013 models can detach while driving because incorrect primer prevents the adhesive from bonding properly, turning the roof panel into a road hazard. On 2013–2014 models, the tire pressure monitoring system can fail to locate individual sensors and instead display a system fault warning, which can mask an actual low-pressure condition and leave a tire failure undetected. The same masking problem affects 2014 models through a separate filing. Going back to the earliest production years, 2010 models have a rollover valve that can be incorrectly installed on the fuel tank, potentially causing a fuel odor, a check engine light, or a fuel leak that can ignite near a heat source.