
On September 19th, the State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR) announced on its official website that Xiaomi Automotive Technology Co., Ltd. is recalling 116,887 SU7 standard-edition electric vehicles manufactured between February 6, 2024, and August 30, 2025. The Paper (www.thepaper.cn) noted that this is the second recall of this model due to quality defects.
In response to this, Xiaomi Auto staff said that this recall was a remote upgrade, and car owners could upgrade according to the prompts from the car computer without having to go to the store.
According to a notice from the State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR), Xiaomi Automotive Technology Co., Ltd. recently filed a recall plan with the SAMR in accordance with the "Regulations on the Administration of Recall of Defective Automobile Products" and the "Implementation Measures for the Regulations on the Administration of Recall of Defective Automobile Products." Effective immediately, the recall will involve 116,887 SU7 standard-edition electric vehicles manufactured between February 6, 2024, and August 30, 2025.
Recall number S2025M0149I: involves XMA7000MBEVR2 and XMA7000MBEVR5 models, totaling 98,462 vehicles.
Recall number S2025M0150I: involves BJ7000MBEVR2 models, totaling 18,425 vehicles.
Some vehicles within the scope of this recall may be unable to adequately identify, warn, or handle extreme scenarios when the L2 high-speed navigation assisted driving function is turned on. If the driver does not intervene in time, the risk of collision may increase, posing a safety hazard.
Xiaomi Automobile Technology Co., Ltd. will use vehicle remote upgrade (OTA) technology to upgrade the software of vehicles within the recall scope free of charge to eliminate safety hazards.
In response to this, on September 19, a staff member of Xiaomi Automobile Technology Co., Ltd. explained about the recall. Starting from September 19, Xiaomi Auto will push information to owners of the recalled vehicles through text messages and mobile apps. At the same time, the car computers of the recalled vehicles will also receive OTA upgrade prompts. "Owners can download and upgrade according to the OTA upgrade prompts on the car computer. There is no need to drive to the store to operate."
He said that in addition to the vehicles involved in the recall, Xiaomi YU7, SU7PRO and other models may also receive OTA upgrade prompts for the car machine. Owners are advised to upgrade according to the prompts. If the vehicles involved in the recall do not receive the upgrade prompt, they can still be driven normally.
The staff member explained that this upgrade is mainly to improve the vehicle's L2 high-speed pilot assisted driving function. "After the upgrade, the car computer will also display it to inform the car owner which problems have been fixed by the upgrade."
According to The Paper, this is the second recall of the Xiaomi SU7 standard edition. On January 24th of this year, the State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR) announced on its official website that Xiaomi Auto was recalling 30,931 SU7 standard edition electric vehicles manufactured between February 6, 2024, and November 26, 2024. The recall was due to a software policy issue in some vehicles that could cause timing synchronization errors, affecting the intelligent parking assist function's ability to detect static obstacles, increasing the risk of scratches or collisions, and posing a safety hazard.
Public reports indicate that on June 16th, Lei Jun claimed in a media interview that the Xiaomi SU7 had sold 250,000 units in 14 months after its launch, becoming the top-selling model priced above 200,000 yuan. The standard version is priced at 215,900 yuan, the PRO long-range version at 245,900 yuan, and the MAX version at 299,900 yuan. Cumulative deliveries of this model have now exceeded 300,000 units.