2025 Rivian R1S Lemon Law – Common Myths Debunked

Electric SUVs like the 2025 Rivian R1S blend cutting-edge software with serious hardware, which means when something goes wrong, it can feel complicated fast. If you’re dealing with recurring service visits, charging issues, or stubborn warning lights, you might be searching for answers about California’s lemon law and what it means for your vehicle.

This article breaks down the basics for California owners and clears up common myths we hear every week. It’s educational information only—not legal advice—and it’s meant to help you understand next steps if your R1S problems aren’t going away.

2025 Rivian R1S Lemon Law in California: The Basics

California’s lemon law (the Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act) protects buyers and lessees of vehicles that have significant defects covered by the manufacturer’s warranty. It can apply to new and, in many cases, used vehicles that are still under a manufacturer’s warranty and were bought or leased in California. For an R1S, this often means issues tied to the electric drivetrain, battery, charging system, suspension, software/infotainment, or safety features that the warranty is supposed to cover.

A vehicle may qualify as a “lemon” when a covered defect substantially impairs the car’s use, value, or safety, and the manufacturer (through an authorized service center) has had a reasonable number of opportunities to fix it. What counts as “reasonable” depends on the problem: serious safety defects can require fewer attempts; other issues may need more. Another signal is downtime—if your R1S spends a significant number of days out of service for warranty repairs, that can factor into a potential claim. The key is that the issues are recurring or unresolved, not just one minor hiccup.

If a vehicle qualifies, typical remedies can include a buyback (refund subject to a mileage offset) or a replacement vehicle, plus certain incidental costs in some situations. Every case is fact-specific, and eligibility depends on the records. For EV owners, it’s helpful to know that over-the-air (OTA) updates and software patches may count as repair attempts if they were done to address the defect and are documented. Keep all service notes, error screenshots, app messages, and charging logs—these details matter.

Common Myths Debunked and Practical Next Steps

Myth: “Software problems don’t count.” In modern EVs, software controls major systems—from charging to thermal management to driver assistance—so recurring software faults that impair use, value, or safety may be covered if they’re within the warranty. Myth: “You need exactly four repair attempts.” California law doesn’t require a magic number; it looks at what’s reasonable given the severity. Myth: “You must wait for a recall.” Lemon law rights don’t depend on a recall. If your R1S keeps showing drivetrain warnings or loses power under load and the issue persists after reasonable attempts, it’s worth evaluating your options.

Myth: “Lemon law only applies in the first 18 months or 18,000 miles.” California has a presumption during that period, but claims can still succeed outside it if the defect arose under warranty and repair attempts were reasonable. Myth: “Leases and used vehicles can’t qualify.” Many leases and some used vehicles with remaining manufacturer warranty coverage are potentially protected. Myth: “You have to use arbitration.” In California, manufacturer arbitration is generally optional; it may not be required before exploring other remedies.

So what should you do? First, document everything: dates, mileage, symptoms, dash warnings, photos/videos, charging sessions, and any OTA update notes. Second, use an authorized service center and describe the same issue consistently so the record reflects a recurring defect. Third, keep copies of repair orders and “no trouble found” notes—those still matter. Fourth, review your warranty booklet to understand coverage and exclusions. Fifth, consider a consultation with a lemon law attorney who can evaluate your specific facts. If you’re experiencing recurring R1S issues—like charging-port faults, range drop not explained by conditions, suspension clunks, or repeated software resets—ZapLemon can discuss your situation and next steps.

This post is for informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Reading it does not create an attorney-client relationship. Results depend on specific facts and cannot be guaranteed. If you believe your 2025 Rivian R1S may qualify as a lemon under California law, contact ZapLemon for a consultation at (310) 489-3017 or visit https://zaplemon.com. We can review your repair history, answer your questions, and help you understand your options.

Ready to See If Your Car Qualifies?

Send us your repair history or call. We’ll review your situation under California lemon law.