2025 Mercedes-Benz CLE Lemon Law – Organize Before You File

If your 2025 Mercedes-Benz CLE keeps heading back to the dealership for the same issues, you’re not alone—and you may have rights under California’s Lemon Law. Before you rush to file a claim, a little organization can go a long way. This guide explains how the law generally works in California and what to gather so you’re ready for a meaningful consultation with a professional.

Is Your 2025 Mercedes-Benz CLE a Lemon in CA?

California’s Lemon Law (part of the Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act) generally protects buyers and lessees of new vehicles that develop defects covered by the manufacturer’s warranty and that substantially impair the car’s use, value, or safety. If the manufacturer, through an authorized dealer, can’t fix the problem after a reasonable number of attempts, the consumer may be entitled to a repurchase or replacement—or other remedies the law provides. The specifics depend on your facts, your warranty, and timing.

What does this look like for a 2025 Mercedes-Benz CLE? Common examples owners report with modern luxury coupes include electrical glitches (intermittent no-starts, battery drain, warning lights), infotainment and connectivity failures (frozen MBUX screen, Bluetooth drops, navigation crashes), transmission or drivetrain issues (hesitation, harsh shifts, shudder), and advanced safety system problems (lane-keep or emergency braking warnings, radar or camera misalignment). Water leaks from a panoramic roof, rattles, brake squeal, or persistent wind noise can also matter when they’re significant and ongoing. The pattern, persistence, and impact on daily use are what typically move a defect from “annoying” to legally significant.

There’s also a California “presumption” that can apply during the first 18 months or 18,000 miles (whichever comes first) if certain thresholds are met—such as multiple repair attempts for the same issue or 30+ total days out of service. That presumption is helpful, but it’s not the only path; vehicles can still qualify outside that window based on the overall repair history. Because every situation is fact-specific, it’s wise to review your repair records, warranty booklet, and timeline before deciding on next steps, and to consult a professional for guidance tailored to your circumstances.

What to Gather Before Filing a California Lemon Law Claim

Start with the paper trail. Collect every repair order and final invoice from your Mercedes-Benz dealer, even for “no trouble found” visits. Make sure each document shows the date, mileage in/out, your exact complaint in your own words, and what the technician did (diagnosis, software updates, parts replaced). Add your purchase or lease agreement, your warranty booklet, registration, proof of payments, and any receipts for towing, rentals, or rideshares provided during repairs. Photos or videos of the defect, screenshots of error messages, and recall notices or technical service bulletins you’ve received are also valuable.

Create a clear timeline. List each incident with the date, mileage, symptom, driving conditions (cold start, freeway speeds, rain), and safety impact (stalling, loss of power, disabled safety features). Note days your CLE was at the shop and whether you were given a loaner. Keep copies of emails and texts with the dealer or Mercedes-Benz customer care, and write down call dates and case numbers. If a service advisor says a part is backordered or a fix is “under engineering review,” note that too—delays can matter when your vehicle is out of service for many days.

Tighten up your next steps. Always schedule repairs with an authorized Mercedes-Benz dealer so work counts under the manufacturer’s warranty. When describing the issue, be specific (“transmission clunks shifting 2–3 at 20–30 mph when warm”) rather than general (“weird sound”). Ask for a printed repair order at drop-off and a final invoice at pick-up, and verify your complaint is written accurately. Before you file any claim, organize your documents in one place and consider a consultation to discuss whether more repair attempts are advisable or whether it’s time to pursue legal options. ZapLemon can review your file and help you understand the process.

Attorney Advertising. This post is for informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Reading it does not create an attorney–client relationship, and past results do not guarantee similar outcomes. If you believe your vehicle may qualify as a lemon, contact ZapLemon at (415) 555-0139 or visit www.zaplemon.com to request a consultation.

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