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5 serious issues in 13 months.. normal?

Alemany

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Picked up my ‘23 ST GTS about one year ago. I love the car — when it drives.

Since owning it I’ve had:
- broken heater
- broken 22kwh charging port, car towed
- sudden 12v battery issue, car towed
- unexplained “electrical system fault”, car towed (dealer tested for a week, could not find anything)

And this morning I had the “electrical system fault” again while driving home. Now the car won’t open/start. So calling the dealer for a tow again…

My wife at this point is telling me that she will not drive this car again and we should sell it. I’m almost there myself. We come from Toyota/Lexus and have literally never had car issues in the past. This experience has been.. different.

I’m curious: am I just unlucky? Did I buy a lemon? Or is this what Taycan ownership looks like?

Selling right now would probably be a bad idea financially, and I’m not expecting Porsche will be giving me any discounts for my experience. Have people been able to swap their cars for a jI 1.2 with Porsche (at a premium I suppose)?

Thanks!
Typical taycan experience...
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dans

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We purchased a brand new turbo just 4 weeks ago. Within 7 days we experienced transmission failure, charge port error where the door was stuck half way and charging error. We rejected the car. The J1.2 is unreliable and whilst I appreciate owners reporting an improvement over j1.1 the faults are unacceptable when you are spending Porsche money. We will possibly look at buying a Tesla or BMW. Why would you risk owning a car with such dreadful residual value and reliability issues. I would except the issues if the residual was better or except the poor residual value if they were reliable but not both.
 
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bastiaan

bastiaan

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This is Porsche Rotterdam doing the services. I imported the car from Germany which doesn’t help here - hard to complain and less incentive for my service dealer to compensate me. Penny wise pound foolish I guess.

48k km driven (bought at 37k). I don’t have a history of repairs, I will ask for that.
 

tomtom901

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This is Porsche Rotterdam doing the services. I imported the car from Germany which doesn’t help here - hard to complain and less incentive for my service dealer to compensate me. Penny wise pound foolish I guess.

48k km driven (bought at 37k). I don’t have a history of repairs, I will ask for that.
Shouldnt be like this, but think you have had the full bingo of all issues with the platform.
 


FlyingPoint

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Certainly not my experience. Over 5 years of ownership and two models MY2020 and MY2024 4S, I have been towed once. This was the result of hitting a pot hole and destroying a tire.

I have had my fair share of recalls, etc. but all done in normal course with a loaner provided.

Personally, I love baseball and use the three strike rule. If a car becomes unusable three times, it is gone. I just went through this with my 2016 GT3 and it is now gone.
 
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69Mach390

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The hard part with threads like this is that ANY car can break (and they do).

One person’s experience of “this broke” isn’t any more helpful than another person saying “my car is fine.” And that exactly what you’ll get on any car forum for any manufacturer.

The only thing about this that’s helpful is finding out if the problem is common and finding out what the fix is.

If you look at the reliability studies, the difference between the number of repairs for cars on the top of the list vs the bottom of the list isn’t very large.

https://www.jdpower.com/business/press-releases/2025-us-vehicle-dependability-study-vds
Problems per 100 vehicles, the ABSOLUTE BEST is 140.

Porsche is 181, average 202 and the bottom of the pack? 285 VW.

Another way to put it, on average the most reliable vehicle breaks down 1.4 times. Average 2 times and absolute worst….. 2.8.

So you could go from a piece of junk VW and be at the dealership 2x in 3 years or the absolute best car on the road and still see your Lexus dealership once. (Sarcasm). 🤷‍♂️

Porsche Taycan 5 serious issues in 13 months.. normal? IMG_4417

I honestly don’t think it’s worth switching cars unless you find a recurring problem that just can’t be fixed. Your chances with the new car/brand aren’t much different than your current one (statistically speaking).
 

SoccerMan94043

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The hard part with threads like this is that ANY car can break (and they do).

One person’s experience of “this broke” isn’t any more helpful than another person saying “my car is fine.” And that exactly what you’ll get on any car forum for any manufacturer.

The only thing about this that’s helpful is finding out if the problem is common and finding out what the fix is.

If you look at the reliability studies, the difference between the number of repairs for cars on the top of the list vs the bottom of the list isn’t very large.

https://www.jdpower.com/business/press-releases/2025-us-vehicle-dependability-study-vds
Problems per 100 vehicles, the ABSOLUTE BEST is 140.

Porsche is 181, average 202 and the bottom of the pack? 285 VW.

Another way to put it, on average the most reliable vehicle breaks down 1.4 times. Average 2 times and absolute worst….. 2.8.

So you could go from a piece of junk VW and be at the dealership 2x in 3 years or the absolute best car on the road and still see your Lexus dealership once. (Sarcasm). 🤷‍♂️

IMG_4417.webp

I honestly don’t think it’s worth switching cars unless you find a recurring problem that just can’t be fixed. Your chances with the new car/brand aren’t much different than your current one (statistically speaking).
These issues aren't equal though. Most of Tesla's issues are software issues that are really minor, for example. And the "recall" process for OTA issues are a joke. JDPowers (and others) need to improve their data collection process to better understand the impact to the user (car not drivable and in the shop, for example).
 


Jasper4S

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Just keep in mind that this is a model-specific forum. The average driver isn’t here. Most people are Taycan owners or enthusiasts, and posts usually appear when someone has an issue. Because of that, every model-specific forum can seem like it is full of problems. Issues are naturally overrepresented.

Remember the battery incident a couple of years ago where a dent caused major damage. It was a single case, yet it dominated discussions for months. That is a good example of how things can appear out of proportion on a forum. The owner went silent after the new battery.

On topic, as others said. Bastiaan hit the jackpot and got all known issues. Bad luck.
 

69Mach390

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These issues aren't equal though. Most of Tesla's issues are software issues that are really minor, for example. And the "recall" process for OTA issues are a joke. JDPowers (and others) need to improve their data collection process to better understand the impact to the user (car not drivable and in the shop, for example).
Most of EVERY cars issues are minor and software related these days. That said, I wouldn’t mind seeing a break down of major and minor breakdowns.

Not sure why you’re defending brand T though. No one even mentioned it.**

** I say brand T because I’ve learned that if you say the full name, the algorithms awaken and you have dozens of new forum members coming to defend the mothership. 😂

For the OP, the JD Power study is perfect to show what is “normal” from a statistical standpoint.
 
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SoccerMan94043

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Most of EVERY cars issues are minor and software related these days. That said, I wouldn’t mind seeing a break down of major and minor breakdowns.

Not sure why you’re defending brand T though. No one even mentioned it.**

** I say brand T because I’ve learned that if you say the full name, the algorithms awaken and you have dozens of new forum members coming to defend the mothership. 😂

For the OP, the JD Power study is perfect to show what is “normal” from a statistical standpoint.
Tesla was just an example of recalls impacting these kinds of reports that were a joke. And Tesla's (as well as more modern car maker's) ability to solve these software issues is much different than needing to bring your car to the dealer for reprogramming (I don't have any real experience here with Porsche and I hope I never will, but it seems like their software architecture is ridiculously complex with all the different modules, making trips to the dealer required).
 

W1NGE

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The hard part with threads like this is that ANY car can break (and they do).

One person’s experience of “this broke” isn’t any more helpful than another person saying “my car is fine.” And that exactly what you’ll get on any car forum for any manufacturer.

The only thing about this that’s helpful is finding out if the problem is common and finding out what the fix is.

If you look at the reliability studies, the difference between the number of repairs for cars on the top of the list vs the bottom of the list isn’t very large.

https://www.jdpower.com/business/press-releases/2025-us-vehicle-dependability-study-vds
Problems per 100 vehicles, the ABSOLUTE BEST is 140.

Porsche is 181, average 202 and the bottom of the pack? 285 VW.

Another way to put it, on average the most reliable vehicle breaks down 1.4 times. Average 2 times and absolute worst….. 2.8.

So you could go from a piece of junk VW and be at the dealership 2x in 3 years or the absolute best car on the road and still see your Lexus dealership once. (Sarcasm). 🤷‍♂️

IMG_4417.webp

I honestly don’t think it’s worth switching cars unless you find a recurring problem that just can’t be fixed. Your chances with the new car/brand aren’t much different than your current one (statistically speaking).
Take any EV variant out of the Porsche stats and I suspect the position will improve drastically.

For the life of me I don’t understand why the ICE models with same options / tech just work but add the EV layer into the mix and it all goes wrong.

I had a 981 from new for 12 years - faultless, Panamera 4 ST - faultless, various Macans to current T - faultless, 992.2 - faultless and so on. Taycan 4S - many campaigns, various issues but my GTS ST was perfect (apart from campaigns).
 

69Mach390

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Tesla was just an example of recalls impacting these kinds of reports that were a joke. And Tesla's (as well as more modern car maker's) ability to solve these software issues is much different than needing to bring your car to the dealer for reprogramming (I don't have any real experience here with Porsche and I hope I never will, but it seems like their software architecture is ridiculously complex with all the different modules, making trips to the dealer required).
I’ve found OTA repairs to be a blessing and a curse.

Blessing- fixes can be plentiful and quick.

Curse- manufacturers (especially brand T) use this as an excuse to make their drivers into Beta testers. You get a bunch of flawed software that should never have made it to the end user in the first place.

Reliability is defined as things doing what they’re supposed to when they’re supposed to. Push a button and it does what it should. Start the car and drive and it does where it should.

We honestly give too much grace and make too many excuses for our BEV manufacturers. It’s OK if you are willing to be a Beta tester and feel like you signed up for it. Others would rather a car just work and only in rare circumstances will you need to change the software or head to the dealership.

I wish OTA updates were mostly just for new features rather than a bunch of buggy software with small constant “fixes.” I had that with my Mach E since 2021. Finally in the last year or so of ownership it was just feature updates rather than fixes.
 

69Mach390

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Take any EV variant out of the Porsche stats and I suspect the position will improve drastically.

For the life of me I don’t understand why the ICE models with same options / tech just work but add the EV layer into the mix and it all goes wrong.

I had a 981 from new for 12 years - faultless, Panamera 4 ST - faultless, various Macans to current T - faultless, 992.2 - faultless and so on. Taycan 4S - many campaigns, various issues but my GTS ST was perfect (apart from campaigns).
Decades of experience.

You wouldn’t be wrong. Porsche was #2 on the list in 2019- https://www.jdpower.com/business/press-releases/2019-us-vehicle-dependability-study-vds

In fact, before EVs a lot of the manufacturers had less problems overall.

I think it’s the reliance on 3rd parties for a lot of the parts and trying to tie them all together without a universally used software system.

Frankenstein cars if you will.
 

Fish Fingers

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Take any EV variant out of the Porsche stats and I suspect the position will improve drastically.

For the life of me I don’t understand why the ICE models with same options / tech just work but add the EV layer into the mix and it all goes wrong.

I had a 981 from new for 12 years - faultless, Panamera 4 ST - faultless, various Macans to current T - faultless, 992.2 - faultless and so on. Taycan 4S - many campaigns, various issues but my GTS ST was perfect (apart from campaigns).
Last year when my Taycan was due in at the dealers yet again, it actually led to me selling it as I couldn't get an appointment or a loan car for 3 months.
I decided to go and see them about it as I really wasnt happy.
The service manager said they always have way more Taycans in than all the other models combined. He showed me round and there were Taycans everywhere waiting to be looked at.

Recalls and faults, combined with a shortage of trained technicians, is why the wait was approaching 3 months.

He said if it had been any other model they could get it in next week.

That car spent more time at the dealers than all my other cars combined in over 40 years.
I never had a recall on any other car, and I think that had 5 in under 3 years.
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