2019 Toyota Tundra inspection checklist
The 2019 Toyota Tundra has 71 owner complaints with NHTSA across 6 component categories. Use this checklist before you put money down — every item below is grounded in the actual failure pattern on this vehicle, not generic advice.
1 Inspect the electrical
What to look for: Dim or flickering dash lights at idle, slow window operation, intermittent infotainment glitches, parasitic battery drain (dead battery after a few days parked). (12 owner complaints on this vehicle · typical repair $850 · failures cluster ~27,629 mi)
2 Inspect the fuel system
What to look for: Anything that looks, sounds, or smells different from peer vehicles of the same year and trim. (7 owner complaints on this vehicle · typical repair $1,200 · failures cluster ~89,891 mi)
3 Inspect the brakes
What to look for: Pulsing brake pedal, pulling to one side when braking, squealing or grinding, soft pedal that goes to the floor. (5 owner complaints on this vehicle · typical repair $450 · failures cluster ~17,500 mi)
4 Inspect the body
What to look for: Paint mismatch between panels (prior accident), rust on rocker panels and wheel wells, door alignment gaps that don't match side-to-side, weatherstrip wear. (4 owner complaints on this vehicle · typical repair $1,500 · failures cluster ~2,000 mi)
5 Inspect the airbags
What to look for: Anything that looks, sounds, or smells different from peer vehicles of the same year and trim. (3 owner complaints on this vehicle · typical repair $1,100 · failures cluster ~57,333 mi)
6 Inspect the lighting
What to look for: Headlight lens haze that'll need restoration, dim low beams, condensation inside the housings, blinkers flashing fast (bulb out). (3 owner complaints on this vehicle · typical repair $250 · failures cluster ~3,500 mi)
7 Paperwork — before you sign
The seller's transparency on these tells you what kind of seller you're dealing with.