2024 Mercedes-Benz EQB Lemon Law – When to Request a Review

If you’re dealing with repeat problems on a 2024 Mercedes-Benz EQB, you’re not alone—and you’re smart to research your options. California’s Lemon Law gives consumers important protections when a new or warrantied vehicle can’t be fixed after a reasonable number of attempts. This article explains how the law applies to EQB owners and when it makes sense to request a lemon law review with ZapLemon so you can make informed next steps.

What California Lemon Law Means for EQB Owners

California’s Lemon Law, part of the Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act, protects buyers and lessees of new vehicles—and certain used vehicles still under the manufacturer’s warranty—when covered defects persist. It applies to electric vehicles like the 2024 Mercedes-Benz EQB just as it does to gas cars. If a warrantied problem substantially impairs the use, value, or safety of your EQB and the manufacturer can’t fix it after a reasonable number of attempts, you may have rights to remedies under the law.

“Substantial impairment” is a practical standard. For an EQB, that could be issues such as loss of propulsion while driving, a high-voltage battery fault that drastically reduces range or triggers limp mode, repeated failure to DC fast charge, intermittent shutdowns or warning messages, malfunctioning advanced driver assistance features (lane keeping, adaptive cruise, automatic emergency braking), steering or brake concerns, or HVAC/defrost failures that affect visibility. Normal wear, damage from misuse, or unauthorized modifications typically are not covered, so it’s important to look at what the warranty covers and how the issue arose.

The law also considers whether the manufacturer had a fair opportunity to fix the problem. In California, there are guidelines—often called the Tanner Presumption—that may apply within the first 18 months or 18,000 miles: typically 2 or more attempts for a serious safety defect, 4 or more attempts for a non-safety defect, or 30 or more cumulative days in the shop for warranty repairs. Even if your EQB falls outside those benchmarks, you may still have a claim depending on the facts. Keep complete records of every visit, repair order, and days out of service; those documents are key to any evaluation.

When to Request a Review for 2024 Mercedes-Benz EQB

A lemon law review is an evaluation of your situation by a legal professional who looks at your paperwork, warranty history, and timeline to see whether your EQB may meet California’s standards. It’s a good time to request a review if you’ve had repeated repairs for a serious safety issue (for example, sudden loss of power, brake or steering malfunctions, or high-voltage battery faults), four or more visits for the same non-safety defect (like a charging door or onboard charger that keeps failing, recurring software or infotainment crashes, or a persistent 12-volt battery drain), or your EQB has been in the shop 30+ total days for warranty work. Persistent “no problem found” results when the symptom keeps returning can also be a signal to ask for help.

Before you reach out, gather your paperwork. Collect purchase/lease documents, your warranty booklet, all repair orders and invoices, tow receipts, and any emails or texts with the dealer or Mercedes-Benz. Because EV issues can be intermittent, it helps to save screenshots from the Mercedes me app, photos of dash warnings, charging session receipts, and notes on when the problem occurs (state of charge, weather, type of charger, software version). Ask the service department about any recalls or technical service bulletins and make sure they’re documented on your repair orders.

If you’re unsure whether to try manufacturer arbitration or go directly to a legal consultation, know that California generally does not require you to complete arbitration first. Deadlines can apply to lemon law claims, so it’s usually better to ask for a review sooner rather than later. ZapLemon can walk you through your options, explain how California law looks at EV-specific defects, and discuss next steps tailored to your situation. A consultation is the best way to understand your rights and potential remedies.

This article is for informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Reading it does not create an attorney-client relationship, and past results do not guarantee a similar outcome. If you believe your 2024 Mercedes-Benz EQB may qualify under California’s Lemon Law, contact ZapLemon for a consultation at (310) 489-3017 or visit https://zaplemon.com. We’re here to review your documents, answer your questions, and help you understand your options.

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