2023 Lamborghini Revuelto Lemon Law – Learn the Impact of Each Repair

Exotic or not, a defective car can ruin your day. If you own a 2023 Lamborghini Revuelto and keep returning to the dealer for the same or similar problems, you may be wondering how California’s Lemon Law applies—and how each repair visit actually impacts your rights. This guide explains the basics and shows why every fix, “no trouble found,” and day in the shop matters. It’s educational information, not legal advice; for guidance about your specific situation, please contact ZapLemon.

California Lemon Law for 2023 Lamborghini Revuelto

California’s Lemon Law (part of the Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act) protects buyers and lessees of new vehicles that come with a manufacturer warranty—including high-performance hybrids like the 2023 Lamborghini Revuelto. If a vehicle has a warranty-covered defect that the manufacturer or its authorized dealers cannot repair after a reasonable number of attempts, you may be entitled to a buyback or replacement, or other remedies. The law applies to personal use vehicles and certain small business uses when the vehicle was purchased or registered in California.

The law includes a “rebuttable presumption” during the first 18 months or 18,000 miles from delivery: generally, two or more repair attempts for a serious safety issue, four or more for a non-safety defect, or the car being out of service for repairs for more than 30 cumulative days may trigger the presumption that the vehicle is a lemon. This presumption is helpful but not required—you can still have a valid claim outside these time or mileage windows or with different repair histories. Outcomes depend on the facts; there are no guarantees.

With the Revuelto’s advanced hybrid V12 system, software-driven components, and high-voltage battery, warranty coverage can be nuanced. Powertrain and emissions parts may carry different warranty periods, and hybrid batteries often have longer coverage. To protect your rights, use an authorized Lamborghini dealer for warranty work, avoid modifications that could be blamed for the problem, and keep every repair order. Technical service bulletins and recall repairs count as repairs too and can help show a pattern of defects.

How Each Fix Affects Your California Lemon Claim

Every repair order is a piece of evidence. California looks at whether the same or “substantially similar” defect keeps recurring—so multiple visits for drivetrain warnings, high-voltage battery faults, gearbox/shifting issues, brake or steering problems, or repeated check-engine lights may count toward the “reasonable number of attempts.” Safety-related issues (for example, brake failure warnings, loss of power, steering faults, airbag malfunctions, HV battery isolation faults) generally require fewer attempts than cosmetic or infotainment glitches. Even “could not duplicate” or “no problem found” visits matter if your complaint is documented on the repair order.

Days out of service add up fast with exotic parts. If your Revuelto is at the dealer for software updates, parts on backorder, or battery diagnostics, those days can count toward the 30-day cumulative threshold. A loaner or rental car doesn’t erase downtime. Repairs performed under warranty are ideal for lemon claims, but paid repairs or “goodwill” fixes can still help show a persistent defect, especially if the same symptoms continue. Keep tow receipts, rental invoices, and any dealer communications about delays.

Practical steps can strengthen your position: describe symptoms clearly (when it happens, dashboard messages, driving conditions), take photos or short videos of warnings, and ask the dealer to record the “cause” and “correction” on each repair order. Test-drive with a technician if the issue is intermittent. Avoid aftermarket tuning or track modifications that could complicate causation. If repairs aren’t resolving the issue, escalate with the manufacturer and consider a consultation with a lemon law attorney. ZapLemon can review your repair history and help you understand options based on California law.

The bottom line for the 2023 Lamborghini Revuelto: each fix, each warning reset, and each day at the dealer shapes your California Lemon Law story. Building a clear paper trail is the best way to understand where you stand and what to do next. This article is for general information only, is attorney advertising, and does not create an attorney-client relationship. For advice about your situation, you must consult an attorney. If you believe your vehicle may qualify as a lemon, contact ZapLemon at (310) 489-3017 or https://zaplemon.com. We’re here to listen, review your records, and help you take the next step.

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