If your 2022 Mercedes-Benz EQE has been in the shop again and again for the same issues, you’re not alone—and you’re right to look into your options. California’s Lemon Law can protect buyers and lessees of new and used vehicles still under warranty, including electric vehicles like the EQE. This article explains what “lemon” status can look like for an EQE and how to make the most of your consultation with ZapLemon so you can move forward with clarity and confidence.
Is Your 2022 Mercedes-Benz EQE a Lemon in California?
California’s Lemon Law (the Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act) generally applies when a manufacturer cannot repair a vehicle’s substantial defects within a reasonable number of attempts during the warranty period. In plain terms, if your EQE has a problem that affects its use, value, or safety—and the dealer has had multiple opportunities to fix it without success—you may have lemon rights. There’s also a legal “presumption” that can help: if, within the first 18 months or 18,000 miles, there have been two or more repair attempts for a serious safety issue, four or more for the same non-safety issue, or the car has been out of service for 30 total days, the law presumes the vehicle is a lemon. Even if you’re outside those milestones, you may still qualify; the presumption just makes the case easier to prove.
With an electric vehicle like the 2022 Mercedes-Benz EQE, recurring defects can look different than with gas cars. Common EV-related complaints across the industry include high-voltage battery failures or range drops, charging port faults, sudden power loss, warning lights tied to the battery management system, software bugs after over-the-air updates, malfunctioning infotainment or driver-assistance features, braking or regenerative braking irregularities, HVAC problems that reduce range, and persistent rattles or alignment issues. If these problems persist despite dealer repairs, or if you’ve been without your EQE for long stretches due to parts delays or repeated diagnostics, it may point toward a lemon situation.
It’s important to remember that every case turns on the details: what the defect is, how often it occurs, whether the dealer documented the concern, and how the issue affects your driving. For example, repeated charging failures that leave you stranded, or software glitches that disable driver-assist features, can impact safety and value. On the other hand, a minor, one-time annoyance that is quickly fixed may not qualify. The best next step is to have a focused consultation where your records are reviewed under California law to understand your options, which might include a repurchase, replacement, or other resolution—depending on the facts and the warranty.
How to Prepare for Your ZapLemon Consultation
Good documentation is the backbone of any Lemon Law review. Before your consultation, gather your purchase or lease agreement, warranty booklet, all repair orders and invoices, and any diagnostic sheets from the dealer. Include dates you dropped off and picked up the vehicle, mileage at each visit, and whether you received a loaner or rental. If you have photos or videos of the defect, screenshots of warning messages, charging-session logs, or communications with the dealer or Mercedes-Benz (texts, emails, case numbers), bring those, too. The goal is to build a clear timeline that shows what’s gone wrong and what’s been done to fix it.
Make a simple chronology: when the problem first appeared, every repair visit for that issue, what the dealer attempted, and the results. Note how the defect affects your life—missed work due to service appointments, range anxiety from unreliable charging, or safety concerns from sudden power loss. If your EQE has been out of service for long stretches, count the total days. Also note any recalls, technical service bulletins the dealer mentioned, or software updates that made things worse or didn’t stick. None of this is legal advice—it’s just practical prep that helps your consultation be productive.
Come ready with questions. Ask about the difference between a repurchase and a replacement, how mileage offsets may be calculated under California law, what “reasonable number of repair attempts” can look like, and whether you should continue presenting the vehicle for repair. You can also discuss manufacturer communications, arbitration programs, and how settlement negotiations typically unfold. The consultation is where an attorney can apply the law to your specific facts. Until then, avoid making assumptions, keep taking the car in for warranted repairs, and continue collecting detailed paperwork so you have an accurate picture of your EQE’s history.
This article is for general informational purposes only, is not legal advice, and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Past results do not guarantee similar outcomes. If you believe your 2022 Mercedes-Benz EQE may qualify as a lemon, contact ZapLemon for a consultation at (310) 489-3017 or visit https://zaplemon.com. A focused review of your documents and timeline is the best way to understand your rights and next steps under California’s Lemon Law.