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RIRecallIndex

2021 Dodge Charger leads 2023 Dodge Challenger by 5 points on the RecallIndex Safety Score. The gap is meaningful and traces typically to either fewer recalls or lower complaint volume on specific systems.

For a used-car purchase decision, the right next step is checking VIN-specific recall status on nhtsa.gov for each candidate vehicle. Any open recall is a free repair at the dealer, regardless of vehicle age, so an open-recall flag is a fix-and-buy situation rather than a deal-breaker.

Verdict

The 2021 Dodge Charger has a meaningfully stronger NHTSA safety record than the 2023 Dodge Challenger — 60/100 (Grade B) vs 55/100 (Grade C). The gap reflects some combination of fewer or smaller recalls, lower complaint volume, and fewer crash or fire reports.

Side-by-Side NHTSA Safety Metrics

Every figure below is pulled directly from NHTSA\'s public Recalls and Complaints databases. Lower is better for everything except the Safety Score.

Metric2023 Dodge Challenger2021 Dodge Charger
RecallIndex Safety Score55/100 (C)60/100 (B)
Total Recalls22
Active Recalls00
Total Complaints3929
Crash Reports02
Fire Reports00
Injuries00
Deaths00

Recall History

Both vehicles share an identical recall count of 2. Recall count is only one piece of the picture — a single fleet-wide brake or airbag recall affects more drivers than three small electrical recalls. The Safety Score weights by component severity and affected-vehicle counts, not raw recall totals.

For VIN-specific recall checks on either vehicle, use the official NHTSA Recalls portal. Recall remedies are performed free of charge by the manufacturer\'s authorized dealer network under the federal Motor Vehicle Safety Act.

Crash, Fire, and Injury Reports

The 2023 Dodge Challenger has no crash, fire, or injury reports flagged in NHTSA complaints. The 2021 Dodge Charger has 2 crash reports, 0 fire reports, 0 injuries, and 0 deaths flagged. These tags don't establish causation but they're a meaningful asymmetry.

Crash, fire, injury, and death tags appear in NHTSA\'s consumer complaint database. NHTSA uses these tags as one signal among many when deciding whether to open a defect investigation.

RecallIndex Score Breakdown

The Safety Score combines four factors. The bars below show each vehicle\'s score on each factor — taller is better.

C2023 Dodge Challenger
Recall Severity70/100
Complaint Rate22/100
Crash/Fire Rate100/100
Trend3/100
B2021 Dodge Charger
Recall Severity70/100
Complaint Rate42/100
Crash/Fire Rate80/100
Trend38/100

How This Comparison Is Built

Every figure in this comparison is sourced from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. Recall counts and active-recall flags come from NHTSA\'s Recalls API. Complaint volume, crash and fire reports, injuries, and deaths come from NHTSA\'s consumer Complaints database. Component categorization uses NHTSA\'s standard taxonomy. The RecallIndex Safety Score weights each input by published methodology weights — read the full step-by-step on the methodology page. We do not adjust NHTSA\'s underlying data; this comparison is a transparent re-presentation of public records.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which is safer, the 2023 Dodge Challenger or the 2021 Dodge Charger?

Based on NHTSA recall and complaint data aggregated into the RecallIndex Safety Score, the 2021 Dodge Charger has the stronger record at 60/100 (Grade B). The score weights recall severity (40%), complaint frequency (30%), crash and fire reports (20%), and trend direction (10%). It is not a substitute for a vehicle history report or in-person inspection.

How many recalls do these vehicles have?

The 2023 Dodge Challenger has 2 NHTSA recall campaigns on record (0 active). The 2021 Dodge Charger has 2 (0 active). To check whether a specific VIN is affected by an active recall, use NHTSA's VIN lookup at nhtsa.gov/recalls.

How many NHTSA complaints have been filed against each?

2023 Dodge Challenger: 39 consumer complaints. 2021 Dodge Charger: 29 complaints. Complaint volume scales with production, so a high-selling model can show more complaints in absolute terms even when the per-unit rate is normal. The RecallIndex Safety Score normalizes for this.

What is the RecallIndex Safety Score?

The RecallIndex Safety Score is a 0-100 (A-F) score built from four NHTSA-derived signals: recall severity (40%), complaint frequency (30%), crash and fire reports (20%), and trend direction (10%). It does not measure reliability (repair cost or frequency) or insurance claim rates — only NHTSA-reported safety events. The full methodology is on the methodology page.

Where does this comparison data come from?

Every figure on this page comes from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration's public Recalls and Complaints databases. RecallIndex aggregates and re-presents the data; we do not modify NHTSA's underlying records. For non-motor-vehicle product recalls see the Consumer Product Safety Commission (cpsc.gov/Recalls); for FDA-regulated items see fda.gov.

Explore More

Source: NHTSA Recalls and NHTSA Complaints — public domain. Cross-reference CPSC for non-vehicle items and FDA Recalls for FDA-regulated products. Last refreshed May 2026.