If your 2025 Dodge Charger is spending more time in the shop than on the road, you’re not alone—and you’re not without options. California’s lemon law gives consumers important protections when a new or warranted vehicle has persistent problems that the manufacturer can’t or won’t fix. This article explains how the law generally works for a 2025 Charger and outlines practical signs that it may be time to involve an attorney. It’s educational information to help you get oriented, not legal advice.
California Lemon Law for 2025 Dodge Charger
California’s Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act—commonly called the California Lemon Law—protects buyers and lessees when a vehicle has a defect that substantially impairs its use, value, or safety and the manufacturer can’t repair it within a reasonable number of attempts. It typically applies to new vehicles under the manufacturer’s warranty and can also cover certain used or certified pre-owned cars still under warranty. Whether your 2025 Dodge Charger is gasoline-powered or electric, the law looks at the problem’s impact, not the powertrain label.
What counts as a “reasonable” number of repair attempts depends on the facts. As a general guide, repeated repair visits for the same issue, two or more attempts for a serious safety defect (like brakes or steering), four or more attempts for a non-safety defect, or a total of about 30 cumulative days out of service may indicate a potential lemon. These are benchmarks, not rigid thresholds—documentation and timing matter. Keep your repair orders, note dates and mileage, and make sure the service department accurately describes your complaint.
If your Charger qualifies, potential remedies can include a manufacturer repurchase (buyback), a replacement vehicle, or a cash settlement to keep the car with compensation for diminished value. A mileage offset may apply for your use before the first repair attempt. California’s fee-shifting rules also allow consumers who prevail to seek recovery of reasonable attorney’s fees and costs from the manufacturer. To protect your rights, review your warranty booklet, check for recalls or technical service bulletins, and keep a complete paper trail of all interactions and repairs.
When to Involve an Attorney for Charger Issues
Consider speaking with a lemon law attorney when you’ve made several repair visits for the same issue and it keeps coming back, especially within the first 18 months or 18,000 miles. California has a “presumption” that can make a case easier to prove when certain repair-visit and time-out-of-service benchmarks occur early in ownership. Even if you’re outside that window, you may still have a viable claim—many successful cases fall outside the presumption.
Serious safety defects are a clear signal to get legal guidance sooner rather than later. Examples include brake or steering failures, airbag warnings that persist after service, stalling at highway speeds, or electrical faults that disable critical systems. For Chargers with advanced electronics or an electric variant, recurring battery, charging, software, or infotainment issues that affect drivability or safety also merit attention—especially if the dealer says “no problem found” but the issue continues, or if the car has been in the shop for weeks waiting on parts or software.
An attorney can help you evaluate your options, preserve evidence, and communicate effectively with the manufacturer. They can assess whether to pursue a buyback, replacement, or cash-and-keep resolution, and advise about arbitration programs and deadlines, including California’s statute of limitations. Keep scheduling service visits (don’t delay repairs), ask for detailed repair orders that list your complaint and the technician’s findings, open a case with the manufacturer, and maintain a log of dates and days out of service. Under California law, consumers who prevail may have their reasonable attorney’s fees paid by the manufacturer, which can make getting legal help more accessible. Results depend on your specific facts and warranty history, so a consultation is important.
This article is for general informational purposes only, is not legal advice, and reading it does not create an attorney-client relationship. Every situation is different, and outcomes cannot be guaranteed. If you believe your 2025 Dodge Charger may qualify as a lemon—or you’re unsure and want clarity—contact ZapLemon to request a consultation at (310) 489-3017 or visit https://zaplemon.com. Attorney advertising.