Door handles used to be simple. You grabbed, you pulled, you exited. Today, they’re software-adjacent components tied into power networks, sensors, and sleek design briefs—and when they fail, the consequences can be far more serious than a broken fingernail. A new investigation by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration into the 2022 Tesla Model 3 is a sobering reminder of what happens when modern convenience collides with old-fashioned physics.
The probe stems from a single but chilling complaint filed with NHTSA’s Office of Defects Investigation. One report was enough to open the door—pun unavoidable—on a potential issue affecting 179,071 Model 3 sedans from the 2022 model year, with the possibility that more vehicles could be added later.
According to the complaint, the driver was involved in a head-on collision in Georgia. The crash knocked out the car’s electrical system, rendering the Model 3’s electronic door releases inoperative. As the interior began to burn, the driver found himself trapped.
His escape was desperate and damaging. He climbed into the back seat and kicked out a rear passenger window to get free, suffering a broken hip, a broken arm, and ultimately requiring a full hip replacement. It’s a horrifying scenario, and one that understandably grabbed NHTSA’s attention.
Still, an investigation does not equal a recall. At this stage, the agency is simply trying to determine whether the incident points to a genuine design defect, insufficient labeling or owner education, or an unfortunate convergence of panic, unfamiliarity, and extreme circumstances. That distinction matters—legally, financially, and philosophically.
Here’s the uncomfortable truth: the driver was likely inches from an easier escape.
Tesla, like many manufacturers using electronic door latches, includes a manual mechanical release. In the Model 3, it’s integrated into the door armrest and requires no tools, no panel removal, and no extraordinary strength. Pull up on the forward portion of the armrest, and the door opens—power or no power.
The complainant, however, says he didn’t know it existed. He describes the release as “hidden,” not visibly labeled, not explained during delivery, and not intuitive in an emergency. That claim cuts straight to the heart of the issue: where does responsibility lie?
Is it on the automaker to make emergency systems unmistakably obvious, even at the expense of clean interior design? Or does some of the burden fall on owners to understand how their vehicle works—especially when it comes to basic safety features?
Tesla will point out, correctly, that the emergency door release is described in the owner’s manual. Critics will counter, also correctly, that very few people read manuals cover to cover, and even fewer recall fine-print details while sitting in a burning car.
The situation becomes even more complicated once you look beyond the driver’s door. According to Tesla’s own documentation for the 2017–2022 Model 3, there are no mechanical emergency door releases for rear-seat occupants. That means passengers in the back are entirely dependent on electrical power or on breaking glass to escape—a fact that could widen the scope of this investigation significantly.
For now, it’s unclear whether NHTSA will conclude that this setup violates federal safety standards. Tesla was almost certainly compliant at the time these cars were built; if not, this issue would’ve surfaced years ago. But compliance doesn’t always equal best practice, and regulators have a habit of re-evaluating what’s “acceptable” after real-world incidents expose the cracks.
Tesla has been here before. Earlier versions of the Model S famously hid rear-seat emergency releases under the carpet—an arrangement that looked clever on a CAD screen and less so when tested by actual humans in actual emergencies.
The broader question goes beyond Tesla. Automakers across the industry are rushing toward electronic latches in the name of packaging efficiency, aerodynamic gains, and futuristic feel. The problem is that electricity, by definition, can stop. Fires burn wires. Crashes sever connections. And when that happens, a door should still open the same way doors have opened for more than a century.
Plenty of manufacturers already hedge their bets by integrating mechanical backups directly into the door handle itself. It’s not glamorous, and it doesn’t photograph well for marketing decks, but it works—and in moments like this, “works” is the only metric that matters.
The NHTSA investigation may or may not end with a recall. But regardless of the outcome, it shines a harsh light on a trend that deserves reconsideration. When a car’s most basic function—letting people get out—depends on electrons behaving perfectly after a violent crash, something has gone wrong.
Maybe it’s time we admit that the best door handle is still the boring one.
Source: NHTSA