If your 2025 Maserati GranTurismo keeps returning to the service bay for the same issues, you’re probably wondering whether California’s Lemon Law can help—and how to build a clear picture of your car’s history. This guide explains the basics of California Lemon Law as it relates to a 2025 GranTurismo and offers practical steps to research and organize your vehicle’s background so you can make informed decisions. It’s educational, not legal advice, and if you need guidance on your specific situation, ZapLemon is here to help.
California Lemon Law Basics for 2025 GranTurismo
California’s Lemon Law (part of the Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act) generally applies to new vehicles sold or leased with a manufacturer’s warranty, including the 2025 Maserati GranTurismo. In plain terms, if a defect covered by the warranty substantially impairs the car’s use, value, or safety—and the manufacturer or its authorized dealer can’t fix it after a reasonable number of attempts—you may have remedies under the law. “Reasonable” depends on the facts, including the type of defect, safety risk, and how many times the car has been in for repairs.
For a 2025 GranTurismo, real-world problems might include drivetrain vibration, dual-clutch or transmission hesitation, infotainment freezing or black screens, HVAC failures, charging or high-voltage battery issues on the Folgore, electrical gremlins like intermittent no-starts, and driver-assistance malfunctions. California also has a “lemon law presumption” that may apply within the first 18 months or 18,000 miles if certain thresholds are met (such as multiple repair attempts for the same problem or 30 or more total days out of service). The presumption is not required to win a case, but it can shift the burden in your favor; an attorney can explain how it might fit your facts.
Warranty coverage matters. Maserati typically provides a new vehicle limited warranty (consult your warranty booklet for exact terms), and repairs done under that warranty are central to any lemon analysis. Technical Service Bulletins (TSBs) and recalls do not automatically make a vehicle a lemon, but they can be important evidence that a known condition exists and that the manufacturer is aware of it. No matter what, keep detailed repair records and ask the dealer to document every concern—even if they “cannot duplicate” it the first time.
How to Research Your 2025 GranTurismo’s History
Start with your VIN. Look up open recalls and investigations on the NHTSA website, and check Maserati’s own recall portal for brand-specific campaigns and software updates. Search for TSBs related to your symptoms; while TSBs aren’t recalls, they can show patterns and approved fixes. Then pull a commercial vehicle history report (such as CARFAX or AutoCheck) and review the NMVTIS database to scan for prior accidents, title brands (including Lemon Law buyback), mileage discrepancies, and prior registration states.
Collect your own paperwork. Gather all repair orders, invoices, and warranty repair summaries from your service department—ask for the “ROs” if you don’t already have them. Build a simple timeline noting the date of each visit, mileage in/out, the problem reported in your words, what the technician found, and the fix attempted (including software versions on infotainment or EV systems). Track how long the car was at the dealer, whether you received a loaner, and any safety incidents; photos, videos, and voice memos of intermittent symptoms can be very helpful.
Go one layer deeper. Ask the dealership to print your vehicle’s internal warranty/service history and any diagnostic snapshots related to fault codes. Check your Maserati Connect app and owner portal for logged alerts or service notifications. Review the title record through California DMV to confirm whether the vehicle has ever been branded (e.g., “Lemon Law Buyback”), and compare that with your history reports. Note any pattern defects after software updates or TSBs, and avoid modifications that could complicate warranty questions. Once your file is organized, consider a consultation to discuss how your history fits California law and what next steps might make sense.
This article is for general informational purposes only, is not legal advice, and reading it does not create an attorney-client relationship. Results depend on the specific facts and applicable law, and past outcomes do not guarantee a similar result. If you believe your 2025 Maserati GranTurismo may qualify as a lemon, contact ZapLemon for a consultation at (310) 489-3017 or visit https://zaplemon.com. We can review your records, answer your questions, and help you understand your options under California law.