2024 Volvo S90 Lemon Law – Your California Rights Explained

If your 2024 Volvo S90 keeps going back to the shop for the same problems, you’re probably wondering whether California’s Lemon Law can help. This article explains the basics in plain English—what counts as a “lemon,” how the law works for new luxury sedans like the S90, and what practical steps you can take right now. It’s general information only, not legal advice, so consider it a useful starting point before you speak with a professional.

Is Your 2024 Volvo S90 a Lemon in California?

A “lemon” isn’t just a frustrating car—it’s a vehicle with a defect covered by warranty that the manufacturer or its authorized dealer can’t fix after a reasonable number of attempts. For a 2024 Volvo S90, that could mean recurring issues such as infotainment or Google Built-In system freezes, warning lights that come back after resets, driver-assistance features that intermittently fail, transmission hesitation or hard shifts, or electrical quirks like battery drain. The key is that the problem substantially impairs the use, value, or safety of the car, and it persists despite repair attempts during the warranty period.

California’s Lemon Law (the Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act) also includes a “legal presumption” that may apply within the first 18 months or 18,000 miles—whichever comes first. While every situation is fact-specific, the presumption can be triggered when: there are two or more repair attempts for a defect likely to cause death or serious injury; four or more repair attempts for the same non-trivial defect; or the vehicle is out of service for repair for a total of 30 or more days. You do not have to meet the presumption to have a viable claim, but it can make your case easier to present.

Not sure if your S90 qualifies? Start by gathering the basics: your purchase or lease agreement, warranty booklets, and every repair order and invoice—especially those showing the dates, mileage, the complaint you reported, the diagnosis, and what parts or software were replaced or updated. Keep a simple log of symptoms (for example, when the adaptive cruise disengages or the center screen reboots) and note how the issue affects your daily driving. These records help show the pattern and the impact on the vehicle’s use, value, or safety.

What California’s Lemon Law Means for S90 Owners

If your 2024 Volvo S90 qualifies under California’s Lemon Law, potential remedies can include a manufacturer repurchase (often called a “buyback”), a replacement vehicle, or a negotiated cash payment to keep the car. A repurchase typically involves refunding what you paid (or the portion of your lease), minus a mileage offset for use before the first significant repair attempt, plus certain incidental expenses like towing or reasonable rental costs. Which remedy may apply depends on your facts and the manufacturer’s options—there’s no one-size-fits-all outcome.

The law generally requires that the manufacturer be given a reasonable opportunity to repair the defect through an authorized Volvo dealer while the warranty is in effect. That’s why taking the vehicle to an authorized service department, clearly describing the symptoms, and obtaining detailed repair paperwork matters. If software updates or technical service bulletins are performed, ensure they’re listed on the repair order. If the dealer says, “No problem found,” ask that the complaint still be documented and consider requesting a test drive with a technician so the issue can be reproduced.

Practical next steps: check your warranty coverage and any recalls, keep copies of every repair order, and avoid skipping service appointments if the issue continues. Track total days out of service, and note any safety-related malfunctions such as braking warnings, power loss, or ADAS sensor faults. If you think the problem is ongoing, consider speaking with a California lemon law attorney to review your documents and timeline. A consultation can help you understand whether your situation meets the law’s standards and what your options may be, including whether to pursue negotiation, manufacturer arbitration, or litigation.

This article is for informational purposes only, is not legal advice, and reading it does not create an attorney–client relationship with ZapLemon. Results depend on your specific facts and the applicable law. If you believe your 2024 Volvo S90 may qualify under California’s Lemon Law, contact ZapLemon at (310) 489-3017 or https://zaplemon.com to request a consultation and discuss your situation.

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