If your new 2024 Chevrolet Equinox EV keeps heading back to the service bay for the same issues, you’re not alone—and you’re not without options. California’s lemon law is designed to protect consumers when a vehicle under warranty has persistent, unfixable problems. This article explains how the law generally works for Equinox EV owners, what to watch for, and why acting promptly matters.
2024 Chevrolet Equinox EV Lemon Law in California
California’s lemon law—formally the Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act—applies to new vehicles sold or leased with manufacturer warranties, including EVs like the 2024 Chevrolet Equinox EV. In plain terms, if a covered defect substantially impairs the use, value, or safety of your vehicle and the manufacturer or its dealer can’t fix it after a reasonable number of attempts, you may be entitled to legal remedies. Those remedies can include a repurchase (often called a “buyback”), a replacement, or other relief, depending on the facts and the law.
“Reasonable number of attempts” depends on the situation. California has a helpful “presumption” guide for the first 18 months or 18,000 miles (whichever comes first): 2 or more repair attempts for a serious safety issue, 4 or more for a non-safety issue, or 30 or more cumulative days out of service for repairs may trigger a presumption that the vehicle is a lemon. This presumption isn’t required to win a case—it’s just a framework. Many valid claims fall outside those numbers, especially when defects are intermittent or tied to complex EV systems.
For an Equinox EV, common real-world issues owners report with new EVs generally can include problems like rapid range fluctuations unrelated to driving conditions, charging failures or port latch faults, repeated “vehicle won’t start/ready” messages, software resets that don’t stick, battery or high-voltage system warnings, infotainment black screens, regenerative braking glitches, or HVAC failures that affect defrost and visibility. Not every hiccup is a lemon, and some problems are caused by public charging infrastructure rather than the car. What matters is pattern and persistence: repeated warranty repairs for the same substantial defect that the dealer can’t or won’t fix.
Act Before Time Runs Out: Deadlines, Next Steps
Time is critical. California has deadlines (statutes of limitations) that may limit how long you have to bring a lemon law claim. A common timeline discussed by courts is up to four years from when you knew or should have known the manufacturer breached the warranty, but the actual clock can vary based on your facts, the type of claim, and the warranties involved (including federal Magnuson-Moss claims and California emissions warranties for EV components). Because deadlines can be complex and easy to miscalculate, consider speaking with a professional quickly to understand your window.
If your Equinox EV is acting up, start with documentation. Each time you visit a dealer, ask for a detailed repair order showing the concern you reported, diagnostic codes, work performed, parts replaced, and days the vehicle was out of service. Keep a simple timeline at home: dates, mileage, symptoms, photos/video of warning messages, and names of service advisors. Check your warranty booklet for coverage on the bumper-to-bumper, powertrain, high-voltage battery, and emissions systems. If the issue continues, escalate your concern in writing to General Motors—send a brief, factual letter or email and save proof that it was sent.
Next steps often include: scheduling another warranty appointment if the defect recurs; asking whether any technical service bulletins (TSBs) or software updates apply; and confirming whether an “informal dispute resolution” program is mentioned in your warranty. In California, using such programs is typically optional, and whether it makes sense depends on your situation. The bottom line: don’t wait for problems to “resolve themselves.” Early, organized action protects your rights and helps any later evaluation by a lawyer or court.
This article is for general information only and is not legal advice. Reading it does not create an attorney–client relationship, and results cannot be guaranteed. If you believe your 2024 Chevrolet Equinox EV may qualify as a lemon, contact ZapLemon for a consultation to review your specific facts and options. To speak with our team, contact ZapLemon at (310) 489-3017 or https://zaplemon.com. Attorney advertising.