If your 2021 Hyundai Kona has been in the shop again and again for the same problem, you’re not alone—and you may be wondering whether California’s lemon law can help. This article explains, in plain language, how the state’s rules generally work for a 2021 Kona, what kinds of defects and repair histories matter, and what steps you can take now to protect your potential claim. It’s educational information only, not legal advice; if you want guidance about your specific situation, reach out to ZapLemon for a consultation.
Is Your 2021 Hyundai Kona a Lemon in California?
California’s lemon law typically applies when a vehicle has a defect covered by the manufacturer’s warranty that substantially impairs use, value, or safety—and the manufacturer or its dealers can’t fix it after a reasonable number of attempts. For many Kona owners, that can look like recurring engine warnings, stalling, transmission hesitation, electrical glitches, brake system warnings, or a battery/charging issue on EV models. Recalls have affected certain Kona variants in recent years; checking your VIN for open recalls is a smart first step, but an open recall alone isn’t required to pursue lemon law remedies.
What counts as a “reasonable” number of repair attempts depends on the defect and the facts. California’s lemon law presumption provides guidelines in the first 18 months or 18,000 miles from delivery (for example, two or more attempts for a serious safety defect, four or more for a non‑safety defect, or 30+ cumulative days out of service), but cars can still qualify outside that window based on the overall repair history. If the same problem keeps coming back, if the dealer says “no problem found” while the issue persists, or if your Kona spends weeks in the shop waiting on parts, those facts can be important.
Practical tip: build a paper trail. Keep copies of every repair order and invoice, note the dates your Kona is in the shop, record mileage, and describe symptoms in your own words (e.g., “vehicle shudders when accelerating from 20–40 mph,” “forward collision warning activates with no obstacle,” “check engine light with loss of power on freeway”). Save emails and texts with the dealer, and take photos or short videos when safe to do so. If you haven’t already, verify warranty status in your owner portal and check recall status by entering your VIN at NHTSA.gov.
Understand Your Legal Position Under CA Lemon Law
California’s Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act generally covers new and used vehicles purchased or leased in the state that are still under the manufacturer’s warranty. To pursue lemon remedies, the defect must arise during the warranty term and the manufacturer (through an authorized dealer) must have been given a reasonable opportunity to repair it. If those conditions are met, potential remedies can include a repurchase (buyback), a replacement vehicle, or, in some situations, a cash-and-keep settlement—though the right outcome depends on the facts and isn’t guaranteed.
Your legal position strengthens with good documentation and timely action. Make service appointments promptly when the problem occurs, clearly report the same symptoms each time, and ask the advisor to include your description on the repair order. If the dealer says the issue is “normal” or “cannot duplicate,” politely request that note in writing. If your Kona is unsafe to drive (for example, sudden loss of power or brake warnings), consider requesting a tow to the dealer rather than driving it in. Always follow recall and technical service bulletin instructions, and keep proof you did.
Every case turns on specifics: which Kona you have (ICE, hybrid, or EV), the nature of the defect (safety-critical vs. comfort feature), how many attempts were made, how long the car was out of service, and whether the problem substantially affects use, value, or safety. Because these nuances matter, a personalized review is essential. ZapLemon can evaluate your repair history, warranty status, and timeline, explain your options, and discuss next steps—all without making promises about results. A consultation is the right way to understand where you stand under California law.
This post is for informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Reading it does not create an attorney–client relationship, and results cannot be guaranteed. If you believe your 2021 Hyundai Kona may qualify as a lemon, contact ZapLemon for a consultation at (310) 489-3017 or visit https://zaplemon.com. Bring your repair orders, timeline, and any correspondence so our team can review your situation and help you understand your options under California’s lemon law.