2025 Jeep Grand Cherokee Lemon Law – Tips for Navigating the Process

If your 2025 Jeep Grand Cherokee keeps heading back to the dealership for the same problems, you’re not alone—and you’re not without options. California’s lemon law provides protections when a new or warrantied vehicle has ongoing defects that affect use, value, or safety. Below is a plain‑English overview to help you understand the basics and consider your next steps. This article is for general information only and isn’t legal advice.

2025 Jeep Grand Cherokee Lemon Law in California

California’s Song‑Beverly Consumer Warranty Act (often called the “lemon law”) generally applies to new vehicles—and certain used or certified pre‑owned vehicles—sold or leased with a manufacturer’s warranty in California. If a manufacturer or its authorized dealer can’t repair a substantial defect after a reasonable number of attempts, you may be entitled to remedies such as a repurchase (buyback), replacement, or a negotiated cash settlement. The exact outcome depends on the facts, and timelines differ, but there is a legal “presumption” that can apply within the first 18 months or 18,000 miles if repairs meet specific thresholds.

A “substantial” defect is one that impairs the vehicle’s use, value, or safety. For a 2025 Jeep Grand Cherokee, common examples consumers report in SUVs generally can include transmission hesitation or harsh shifts, steering pull or vibration, repeated check‑engine lights, infotainment/Uconnect freezing or rebooting, power liftgate malfunctions, brake pulsation, electrical gremlins (warning lights, dead batteries, sensor faults), water leaks, or wind noise. Hybrid 4xe owners sometimes mention charging or EV mode issues, reduced electric range, or battery warnings. Not every issue is a lemon, but repeated, unresolved problems that materially affect your driving experience could qualify under the law.

The law doesn’t require perfection; it requires that the manufacturer gets a reasonable chance to fix the problem under warranty. As a rule of thumb—not a guarantee—issues can meet the presumption if the defect required four or more repair attempts, two or more for a defect likely to cause serious injury or death, or the vehicle was out of service for 30 or more cumulative days for warranty repairs during the presumption period. Software updates, module replacements, and recall remedies can count as repair attempts. Used and CPO vehicles may be covered if the defect arises and is repaired under the manufacturer’s warranty. Federal warranty law (the Magnuson‑Moss Warranty Act) may also provide options.

Key Steps and When to Contact ZapLemon for Help

Start by confirming warranty coverage in your Jeep warranty booklet and checking for technical service bulletins or recalls that match your symptoms. Always go to an authorized Jeep/Stellantis dealer for warranty work, describe the concern the same way each time, and ask that the service advisor write your exact complaint on the repair order. Keep complete records: every repair order, dates in and out, mileage in and out, what was diagnosed and replaced, tow or rental receipts, and any emails or texts with the dealer or manufacturer.

Consider reaching out to ZapLemon if you’ve had multiple unsuccessful repair attempts for the same issue, safety‑related defects that return after two attempts, or your Grand Cherokee has spent 30 or more cumulative days in the shop. It’s also smart to consult if the dealer says “cannot duplicate,” “operating as designed,” or keeps performing the same software reflash that doesn’t stick. Early guidance can help you avoid common pitfalls, preserve evidence, and understand timing, but reading this post or contacting ZapLemon does not create an attorney‑client relationship—formal representation requires a signed agreement after a consultation.

If your vehicle qualifies, potential outcomes can include a manufacturer buyback (repurchase), a replacement vehicle, or a negotiated cash‑and‑keep settlement, depending on your circumstances. A buyback typically factors in a mileage offset for the use you received before the first repair attempt for the qualifying defect, and incidental expenses like towing or rental may be considered under the law. California’s lemon law includes a fee‑shifting provision that may allow consumers to seek recovery of reasonable attorney’s fees from the manufacturer, but eligibility and results vary and depend on the facts of your case.

Persistent defects on a 2025 Jeep Grand Cherokee can be stressful, but clear documentation and timely action can make a difference. Keep thorough records, return to an authorized dealer for warranty repairs, and learn how California’s lemon law may apply to your situation. This article is for informational purposes only, is not legal advice, and reading it does not create an attorney‑client relationship.

If you believe your vehicle may qualify as a lemon, contact ZapLemon at (310) 489-3017 or https://zaplemon.com. Consultation is required for legal advice, and outcomes cannot be guaranteed.

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