If your 2022 Hyundai Accent keeps going back to the shop for the same problems, you may be wondering whether California’s Lemon Law can help. Below, we explain how the law applies to 2022 Accents and how to get organized for the process. This article is for general information only and isn’t legal advice—every situation is different, and a consultation is the best way to understand your options.
What California Lemon Law Means for 2022 Accents
California’s Lemon Law (part of the Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act) protects buyers and lessees of vehicles that develop warranty-covered defects the manufacturer can’t fix after a reasonable number of attempts. It applies to many new and used vehicles still under the manufacturer’s warranty, including 2022 Hyundai Accents. The key is that the issue must be covered by Hyundai’s warranty and must substantially impair the vehicle’s use, value, or safety—not normal wear-and-tear or damage from misuse.
The law includes a helpful “presumption” that a car may be a lemon if certain things happen within the first 18 months or 18,000 miles, whichever comes first. Examples include: four or more repair attempts for the same problem; two or more attempts for a defect that could cause serious injury or death; or 30 or more total days in the shop for warranty repairs. You can still pursue a claim even if you’re outside those numbers—the presumption just makes certain cases easier to prove. What matters most is giving Hyundai a fair opportunity to repair the issue and keeping clear records.
For 2022 Accents, consumers often report concerns like transmission shudder or hesitation, stalling or loss of power, repeated check-engine lights, infotainment or electrical glitches, A/C failures, and brake or steering issues. Not every issue is a “lemon” problem, but repeated, unresolved defects that keep you returning for the same repairs can qualify. If a vehicle meets the law’s standards, potential remedies can include a repurchase (buyback), a replacement vehicle, or a negotiated cash settlement—what’s appropriate depends on the facts, and outcomes are never guaranteed.
How to Prepare Your 2022 Accent Lemon Claim
Start by building a paper trail. Save every repair order, invoice, and warranty record. Make sure each repair order lists your exact complaint (“transmission jerks between 10–20 mph,” “engine stalls at stoplights,” etc.), the dates in and out, mileage, and what the dealer did (cause and correction). Keep notes and videos showing symptoms, especially intermittent ones. Track days your Accent is out of service, loaner/rental receipts, towing bills, and communications with the dealer or Hyundai. Review your warranty booklet and check for recalls or technical service bulletins that match your symptoms.
Continue taking the car in promptly when the problem appears, and describe the issue consistently. If a concern returns, tell the service advisor it’s the same issue and ask them to document it that way. If repairs aren’t resolving the problem, consider escalating to Hyundai Customer Care in writing, keeping copies. Hyundai participates in certain dispute programs (such as BBB AUTO LINE), which may be optional tools—California generally does not require arbitration before a Lemon Law claim, but it can be part of a strategy. A consultation can help you understand pros and cons for your situation.
Before you speak with a lawyer, gather a simple packet: purchase/lease agreement, registration, warranty booklet, repair orders, tow/loaner/rental receipts, and a timeline of problems. Think about your goals (e.g., repurchase vs. keep-and-cash). Don’t stop making payments or cancel insurance while your case is pending—that can create separate issues. If you believe your 2022 Accent may qualify, the next step is to talk with a professional who can review your documents and explain your options based on California law.
This article is for informational purposes only, is not legal advice, and reading it does not create an attorney–client relationship. Every case turns on its own facts, and results are not guaranteed. If you’re dealing with ongoing defects in your 2022 Hyundai Accent and want to understand your options under California’s Lemon Law, contact ZapLemon for a consultation at (310) 489-3017 or visit https://zaplemon.com.