Will the $1800 Faulty Prius Headlight Scandal Hurt Toyota?
July 6, 2009
The story that’s been traveling through online branding circles over the past several days has centered around the upgraded headlights in Toyota’s eco-friendly Prius model and their tendency to fail, particularly after the car’s warranty is over. At first glance, this story might not seem like a big deal. So the headlight goes out. Head over to the local auto parts store and pick up a new bulb. But wait a minute! These are not just any headlights. These are special upgrade headlights that cost up to $1800 to repair and replace when they go out. Suffice it to say, a class action lawsuit has been filed against Toyota over these $1800 headlights.
Now, you might ask, if this is a widespread problem, why hasn’t Toyota issued a recall? Well, despite Toyota’s reputation as being a manufacturer of quality vehicles that will last far longer than American made (I’ve heard that sales pitch at my local Toyota dealership – in fact, it was the only pitch the salesman had), the company is notoriously slow in responding to widespread problems such as this. That slow to react approach might have a bigger impact on Toyota now for a few reasons:
- With economies doing poorly, consumers are ready to switch brands at a moment’s notice. It’s not time to get slack on any kind of customer service issue.
- The Prius is the “it” car for socially and environmentally conscious consumers. This is not an audience that will respond positively to a company that doesn’t do the right thing.
- If consumers don’t feel like they can count on the Toyota brand, then they’ll see little differentiation between Toyota and other car brands whose reputations have been tainted recently, namely, American automobile manufacturers like General Motors.
These reasons don’t even touch on the most obvious question — why does the Prius have an $1800 headlight upgrade option? It seems excessive for a car that’s supposed to represent the opposite of excess.
So the question remains whether or not Toyota responds quickly enough to turn this black mark on its record into a minor blemish or if it will blow up into a full-fledged PR disaster. We’ll have to wait and see. Certainly, given the state of the world around us, one would think that a quick, customer-focused response would be the best path for Toyota to take to keep the promise its brand has come to represent to consumers.
What do you think?
Image: Flickr
| |
|
|
![]() | ||
| Send to a friend | |||||
| Want more? Subscribe via RSS | |||||
This post was written by Susan Gunelius.
Agree? Disagree?
Do let Susan Gunelius know what you think by commenting below ...
Comments
8 Responses to “Will the $1800 Faulty Prius Headlight Scandal Hurt Toyota?”
Got something to say?

I don’t mean to nitpick, but is that actually an $1800 headlight or is it just such a pain to replace, that the “Lion’s share” is labor-related? Having owned a Hyundai Santa Fe that had an A/C component fail (Thermistor) and while the replacement part only cost about $40, the labor to replace the part, which was located under the dashboard, cost over $500. I might suspect an issue with the labor cost on the Prius; in which case I say “carry on” with the lawsuit, as that type of labor is really highway robbery.
Scott, From what I’ve read, the replacement headlight costs about $1400 and the rest is labor.
Google “Prius headlight issue” and you will get hundreds of responses. PriusTalk and hybridcar chat both claim thousands of users that have malfunctioning HID headlights.
The latest (2 weeks ago 9/1/09) claimed a formal complaint to the NHTSA petitioned by 338 owners of Prius’ was dismissed.
Having first hand experience with the issue on a 2006 Prius and 3 fruitless repair trips to our nearest and dearest Toyota dealership willing to handle the issue 125mi away… It goes beyond a simple annoyance into a costly proposition to resolve a major safety issue. By not acting on the issue, we have decided to pawn the car off and purchase a Honda Insight this year.
TOYOTA WILL NOT TAKE CARE OF CRITICAL SAFETY ISSUES.
We have a 2005 Prius and just had it at our local dealer to get a blinking right HID headlight fixed to the tune of $1200 (that’s right, no decimal point!), and now the left one is doning the same thing.
I called Toyota, and after an initial “We can help” discussion, they couldn’t help because at 115,000 miles the warranty was expired.
I’m going to rewire the thing, and put in plain old halogen bulbs.
No way I’ll pay another $1200 when I can get bulbs for under $10.
Toyota really screwed up a great car by putting HID lights on it.
There customer support completely sucks! I think we should have a class action suit.
I am just today experiencing the head lights going out after about 5 minutes…both at once. I called the local toyota service and they said they needed to be replace and it would be $460 for total for both of them. $150 each and the rest labor. they are HID units.
It does not make sense to me that if they are wearing out they would both go out at the same time. I have an apoint ment later today for the replacement but I am now very leary that this may not be the fix and it will lead to something else really costly.
Any thoughts.
I can’t beleive somemany high price problems with Toyota. And why haven’t these and other stories hit the press? Does Toyota own them like our poloticians?
I have a 2007 Prius and the headlights will go off and come on on thier own. I have been stopped by the state police to inform me that my right headlight was out. I turned my car off. When I started it up again my headlight was on. The officer just scratched his head and said that a Prius for you. This would be bad if I was on a dark road a night.