IoT Security

Nissan Leaf Hacked for Remote Spying, Physical Takeover

Researchers find vulnerabilities that can be exploited to remotely take control of a Nissan Leaf’s functions, including physical controls.

Nissan Leaf hacked

Researchers have demonstrated that a series of vulnerabilities affecting the Nissan Leaf electric vehicle can be exploited to remotely hack the car, including for spying and the physical takeover of various functions. 

The research was conducted by PCAutomotive, a company that offers penetration testing and threat intelligence services for the automotive and financial services industries. The Nissan Leaf hacking was detailed last week at Black Hat Asia 2025.

PCAutomotive researchers targeted a second generation Nissan Leaf made in 2020. The vulnerabilities they found enabled them to use the infotainment system’s Bluetooth capabilities to infiltrate the car’s internal network.

They were then able to escalate privileges and establish a C&C channel over cellular communications to maintain stealthy and persistent access to the EV directly over the internet. 

The researchers showed that an attacker could exploit the vulnerabilities to spy on the owner by tracking the car’s location, taking screenshots of the infotainment system, and recording people talking in the vehicle.

They were also able to remotely take control of various physical functions, including doors, wipers, the horn, mirrors, windows, lights, and even the steering wheel, including while the car was in motion. 

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

The vulnerabilities have been assigned eight CVE identifiers: CVE-2025-32056 through CVE-2025-32063. The disclosure process started in August 2023 and Nissan confirmed the findings in January 2024, but it took until recently to get the CVEs assigned, according to the researchers. 

Contacted by SecurityWeek, a Nissan spokesperson commented, “PCAutomotive contacted Nissan regarding its research. While we decline to disclose specific countermeasures or details for security reasons, for the safety and peace of mind of our customers we will continue to develop and roll out technologies to combat increasingly sophisticated cyberattacks.”

PCAutomotive has published a video showing how their exploits were used to remotely hack the Nissan Leaf. 

Automotive exploits can have a significant monetary value. At the recent Pwn2Own Automotive hacking competition, participants earned a total of $886,000 for exploits targeting EV chargers and infotainment systems.

Related: Subaru Starlink Vulnerability Exposed Cars to Remote Hacking

Related: Is Your Car Spying on You? What It Means That Tesla Shared Data in the Las Vegas Explosion

Related: Unpatched Vulnerabilities Allow Hacking of Mazda Cars: ZDI

Related: Nissan Data Breach Impacts 53,000 Employees

Related Content

Data Breaches

The hackers stole internal IDs, names, email addresses, and business partner IDs from an internal management system.

IoT Security

Using low-cost receivers deployed along roads, academic researchers tracked drivers and their movement patterns.

Data Breaches

The personal information of 21,000 customers was stolen after hackers compromised Red Hat’s GitLab instances.

Data Breaches

LKQ said the personal information of thousands of individuals was compromised as a result of the hacker attack.

IoT Security

Set for January 2026 at Automotive World in Tokyo, the contest will have six categories, including Tesla, infotainment systems, EV chargers, and automotive OSes.

IoT Security

Oligo Security has shared details on an Apple CarPlay attack that hackers may be able to launch without any interaction.

Vulnerabilities

A researcher has demonstrated how a platform used by over 1,000 dealerships in the US could have been used to hack cars.

IoT Security

Researchers showed how flaws in a bus’ onboard and remote systems can be exploited by hackers for tracking, control and spying. 

Copyright © 2026 SecurityWeek ®, a Wired Business Media Publication. All Rights Reserved.

Exit mobile version