If your 2025 Hyundai Santa Cruz keeps going back to the shop for the same problems, you’re not alone—and you may have rights under California’s Lemon Law. This article explains, in plain English, what a “lemon” is in California and outlines the typical steps Santa Cruz owners follow to pursue help. It’s educational information only—every situation is unique, and a consultation is the best way to understand your options.
Is Your 2025 Hyundai Santa Cruz a Lemon in CA?
In California, a vehicle may qualify as a “lemon” when it has a defect covered by the manufacturer’s warranty that substantially impairs its use, value, or safety, and the manufacturer (through an authorized dealer) can’t fix it after a reasonable number of repair attempts. This applies to new vehicles and many used vehicles still under the original manufacturer’s warranty. For 2025 Hyundai Santa Cruz owners, the key questions are whether the issue is covered by Hyundai’s warranty, whether it meaningfully impacts the truck, and whether the dealer has had enough chances to repair it.
California’s Lemon Law includes a helpful—but not mandatory—presumption during the first 18 months or 18,000 miles (whichever comes first). Under that presumption, a vehicle may be presumed a lemon if: the manufacturer made two or more attempts to repair a defect that is likely to cause serious injury or death; or four or more attempts to repair the same non-safety defect; or the vehicle was out of service for repair for a total of 30 or more days. Even if your Santa Cruz falls outside those 18 months/18,000 miles, or doesn’t meet the exact presumption, you may still have a claim based on the overall repair history and warranty coverage.
Common, relatable issues that can trigger lemon concerns include repeated stalling or hesitation, transmission slipping or harsh shifting, brake vibrations or premature wear, steering pull or alignment that won’t hold, recurring check engine lights, electrical or infotainment system failures, malfunctioning driver-assistance features (like lane keep or forward collision alerts), HVAC failures, and persistent water leaks or rattles. Not every problem will qualify, and not every 2025 Santa Cruz has these issues—but if a covered defect keeps coming back, it’s worth learning your rights. Practical steps now include: confirming warranty coverage in your Hyundai warranty booklet, taking the truck to an authorized Hyundai dealer, describing symptoms clearly, and keeping complete service records and invoices.
California Lemon Law Process for 2025 Santa Cruz
Start by giving the dealer a reasonable opportunity to fix the problem while your warranty is active. Each time you visit, describe the issue the same way, note when it happens (cold start, highway speeds, turning, etc.), and ask the service advisor to capture your exact complaint on the repair order. Always leave with a final, dated invoice showing your complaint, the technician’s findings, parts replaced, software updates applied, mileage in/out, and days out of service. If the issue seems unsafe, use caution and document why.
If the defect persists, put your concerns in writing to Hyundai and request warranty relief. Some manufacturers offer voluntary arbitration programs; participation can be faster but is not always required in California. Remedies under the Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act may include a repurchase (buyback), a replacement vehicle, or a cash settlement to keep the car as-is, depending on the facts. A repurchase typically includes your down payment, monthly payments, certain incidental costs, and payoff of the loan balance, minus a mileage offset for your use before the first substantial repair attempt. California law also allows prevailing consumers to seek recovery of reasonable attorney’s fees, but outcomes and availability of any remedy depend on the specifics of your case.
Timelines matter. California generally has a four-year statute of limitations that can run from when you knew or should have known you had a claim, so it’s wise to act promptly. Organize your file: purchase/lease agreement, warranty booklet, all repair orders and invoices, photos/videos of symptoms, recall or service campaign letters, and notes of your communications with the dealer or Hyundai. ZapLemon can review your documents, explain options, and handle communications with the manufacturer so you can focus on daily life, but a consultation is needed to evaluate your situation.
This article is for informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Reading it does not create an attorney-client relationship with ZapLemon. Every matter is different, and prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. If you believe your 2025 Hyundai Santa Cruz may qualify as a lemon, contact ZapLemon for a consultation at (310) 489-3017 or visit https://zaplemon.com. We’ll listen, review your records, and help you understand your next steps under California law.