If you're spending a cool half-million on a Rolls-Royce, are you entitled to perfection? Apparently not, as the ultimate purveyor of British luxury is recalling 102 Cullinan SUVs to fix a problem with the second-row seat belts.The iconic automaker has alerted the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration that workers at the assembly plant in Crewe, UK, may have not properly tightened to specification the bolts attaching the left and ride side rear safety belts to the vehicle body. The same issue occurred with the rear bench seat backrest locking brackets.The recall notice says that without being properly tightened, the bolts could loosen over time, "and also potentially cause damage" to either the left or right side rear seat safety belt webbing. "In the event of a collision, either the left or right side rear seat safety belts may not provide sufficient restraint, or the rear bench seat backrest may move forward under load from goods in the luggage compartment. Both of these conditions could increase the risk of injury." 102 Cullinans Impacted Rolls-Royce Owners of the 102 affected vehicles, from model years 2020 to 2026, are advised "not to use the rear seating area or carry goods in the rear luggage compartment until the vehicle has been inspected and, if applicable, remedied." Mailings with these details are scheduled to be sent to the impacted owners on May 4. The first customers took delivery of the Cullinan – the first SUV bearing the Rolls-Royce Spirit of Ecstasy – in early 2019.According to NHTSA documents, the issue was found during a routine inspection for quality control. The company decided to issue a recall out of an abundance of caution, and notes that no reported accidents or injuries related to the issue have been received. The NHTSA safety report number is 26V143. Rolling Large With Rolls-Royce CarBuzzIt might be hard to believe, but the big, luxurious Cullinan has been around for eight years already. It debuted back in May 2018 during the prestigious Concorso d'Eleganza Villa d'Este in Italy, packing snazzy seating for four adults into an SUV weighing nearly three tons. Little has changed since then despite a minor facelift for 2024. Under the hood is a 6.75-liter twin-turbocharged V12 engine under the hood that generates 591 horsepower in Black Badge guise.Despite the high price tags, the Cullinan isn't the first Rolls-Royce to be recalled in recent years. There were multiple recalls for braking and electrical issues associated with the Spectre EV in 2024, and about 1,300 Ghost models (2021-2023) were called back because glass on the instrument cluster could shatter in a crash. The Phantom was recalled in 2023 for headlights that lacked a specific metal coating required by federal safety standards. The Phantom (2019-2022) also was called back because the central information display might not raise correctly, blocking the rearview camera.