The 2022 Mercedes-Benz E-Class has 20 owner complaints with NHTSA across 3 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). (3 owner complaints on this vehicle
· typical repair $850 )
On the test drive: Cycle through every electronic accessory during the drive — heated seats, defrosters, climate fan on max, cruise control. Glitches show up under load.
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 $1,200 · failures cluster ~14,403 mi)
What to look for: Wandering on the highway, clunks when turning, slop in the wheel before the tires respond, power steering whine. (3 owner complaints on this vehicle
· typical repair $700 )
On the test drive: On a smooth highway, take hands off briefly (when safe) — vehicle should track straight. Pulling left or right means alignment or worn front-end parts.
The seller's transparency on these tells you what kind of seller you're dealing with.
Inspection items derived from 20 owner complaints and 0 active recall campaigns filed
with NHTSA on the 2022 Mercedes-Benz E-Class. Category-specific guidance is written by ProblemsByVin contributors with ASE-certified mechanic
review. This checklist is meant to surface known patterns — it doesn't replace a paid pre-purchase inspection by a
qualified shop, which we recommend for any used vehicle priced over a few thousand dollars.