If your 2021 Ram 2500 keeps heading back to the shop for the same problems, you’re likely wondering if California’s lemon law can help. The short answer: it might. Below, ZapLemon explains the basics of how California’s Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act applies to a 2021 Ram 2500, what “reasonable repair attempts” means, and the practical steps to take before you file a claim.
Is Your 2021 Ram 2500 a Lemon Under CA Law?
California’s lemon law generally protects consumers when a new or warrantied vehicle has a substantial defect that the manufacturer or its authorized dealer can’t fix after a reasonable number of attempts. For a 2021 Ram 2500, that usually means a defect covered by the factory warranty that affects use, value, or safety—things like persistent transmission shudder, steering or suspension wobble, brake issues, electrical failures, Uconnect glitches, DEF/DPF or emissions faults on diesel models, 4×4 or driveline vibration, or repeated check-engine lights. The law can apply to new, demonstrator, and some used vehicles still under the manufacturer’s warranty.
California also has a “lemon law presumption” within the first 18 months or 18,000 miles (whichever comes first). During that window, the law presumes your truck is a lemon if: (1) the dealer tried to fix a serious safety defect at least twice, (2) the dealer tried to fix the same non-safety defect at least four times, or (3) the truck was out of service for repair for a total of 30 or more days. Falling outside this presumption period does not end your rights—many vehicles still qualify based on the overall repair history and warranty coverage.
Usage matters, too. If your 2021 Ram 2500 is used primarily for personal, family, or household purposes, California’s lemon law typically applies. If it’s primarily a business vehicle, coverage may still apply if the gross vehicle weight rating (GVWR) is under 10,000 pounds and the business has no more than five vehicles registered in California. Remedies may include a buyback (repurchase), a replacement vehicle, or a cash-and-keep settlement, but the outcome depends on the facts, the repair history, and the warranties involved.
Before You File: Repairs, Records, and Next Steps
Start with repairs. Take the truck to an authorized Ram/Chrysler/Dodge/Jeep dealer for every issue and describe each symptom clearly (when it happens, speeds, temperatures, warning lights, sounds, or smells). Ask for detailed repair orders every time, and make sure they accurately list your concerns, mileage in/out, the technician’s findings, parts replaced, and days the truck was in the shop. If a problem is intermittent, ask the advisor to note that, not “no problem found,” and request road tests or data logs as appropriate. Keep all invoices, warranty booklets, recall notices, and correspondence in one place.
Create a paper trail. Maintain a simple timeline of dates, miles, and the exact issue for each visit. Take photos or short videos of symptoms when safe to do so. If your 2021 Ram 2500 is affected by a recall or technical service bulletin (TSB), print that information and keep it with your records; recalls don’t automatically make a lemon claim, but they can help show a pattern. Consider asking the dealer or Ram customer care for a case number. If repairs are delayed due to parts backorders, note every day the vehicle is unavailable—those days can count toward the 30-day out-of-service threshold.
Plan your next steps. California has deadlines for warranty and lemon law claims, and timing can be complicated—often tied to when the warranty obligations were breached—so acting promptly is important. Some manufacturers, including FCA US LLC (Stellantis), may offer arbitration programs; these can be optional and may not be the best path in every situation. Avoid modifications that could affect warranty coverage, continue to present the vehicle for repair, and consider a consultation to review whether your repair history meets California standards before you file a claim.
This article is for informational purposes only, is not legal advice, and does not create an attorney–client relationship. Attorney advertising; past results do not guarantee similar outcomes. If you believe your 2021 Ram 2500 may qualify as a lemon under California law, contact ZapLemon for a consultation at (310) 489-3017 or visit https://zaplemon.com. We can review your repair history, explain your options, and help you decide on next steps.