If your 2025 Mercedes-Benz S-Class keeps visiting the service bay for the same issues, you’re not alone—and you’re not without options. This guide explains how California’s lemon law can apply to a luxury flagship like the S-Class and how to document your repairs so you stay informed every step. It’s educational, not legal advice, and the best next step is to speak with a professional about your specific situation.
2025 Mercedes-Benz S-Class: CA Lemon Law Basics
California’s Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act—often called the state’s “lemon law”—protects buyers and lessees of new and certain used vehicles sold or leased in California with a manufacturer’s warranty. In plain terms, if your S-Class has a defect covered by warranty that substantially impairs use, value, or safety, and the manufacturer can’t fix it after a reasonable number of attempts, you may be entitled to a repurchase or replacement. This can apply to leased vehicles as well, so long as they’re under the manufacturer’s warranty.
For a 2025 Mercedes-Benz S-Class, issues can show up in ways owners can recognize: infotainment or MBUX glitches, driver-assistance system malfunctions (like lane-keeping or adaptive cruise faults), electrical gremlins, air suspension problems, transmission hesitation, or repeated battery drain. Not every hiccup qualifies; the defect generally must be more than a minor annoyance and must be covered by warranty. The key question is whether the problem substantially impairs how you use the car, its resale value, or its safety—and whether the authorized dealer has had a fair chance to repair it.
California also provides a helpful “presumption” during the first 18 months or 18,000 miles (whichever comes first). During that window, the law presumes a vehicle is a lemon if, for example, the dealer has made two or more attempts to fix a defect that could cause serious injury or death, four or more attempts for other warranty defects, or the car has been out of service for more than 30 cumulative days for repairs. This presumption is not the only way to prove a claim—you can still have a case outside that window—but it offers a useful benchmark for S-Class owners tracking early issues.
Steps to Document Repairs and Protect Your Rights
Start by reporting problems to an authorized Mercedes-Benz dealer as soon as they appear, and describe symptoms in detail. Mention when the issue occurs (cold start, highway speeds, after OTA updates), and ask the advisor to include your exact complaint on the repair order. If the dealer says “no problem found,” request a joint road test with a technician and ask that the “could not verify” note be documented, along with any diagnostic codes checked.
Keep a complete paper trail. Save every repair order and invoice, even if no parts were replaced. Note dates, mileage in and out, days the S-Class was in the shop, and the repair attempts made. If safe, take photos or short videos of warning messages, screen freezes, vibrations, fluid leaks, or intermittent behavior. Maintain a simple log at home capturing when the problem happens and how it affects use, value, or safety—for example, “collision warning disabled in rain,” “suspension lowers unexpectedly,” or “car stalls after idling.”
Stay proactive with your warranty and communications. Confirm your warranty coverage in the Mercedes-Benz booklet, check NHTSA.gov for open recalls, and ask the dealer whether any technical service bulletins (TSBs) apply to your VIN. Consider opening a case with Mercedes-Benz USA and keep all communication in writing or saved emails. Avoid modifications that could complicate warranty coverage, and track cumulative days out of service. If repairs drag on, explore dispute resolution options noted in your warranty materials and consider a consultation with a lemon law professional to understand timelines and your potential remedies.
This article is for general informational purposes only, is not legal advice, and reading it does not create an attorney-client relationship. Outcomes depend on specific facts and law. If you believe your 2025 Mercedes-Benz S-Class may qualify under California’s lemon law, contact ZapLemon for a consultation at (310) 489-3017 or visit https://zaplemon.com. We’ll help you understand the process, your options, and what to expect—so you can stay informed every step of the way.