Buying a used car from a private seller in California can be a great way to save money, but it can raise hard questions if the vehicle turns out to be a dud. Many shoppers search for “California Lemon Law for private sales” and find confusing, mixed answers. This article explains how the law treats private party deals, when manufacturer warranties can still help, and why the Lemon Law usually doesn’t apply to the individual seller—so you can plan your next steps with clear expectations.
How California Lemon Law Works in Private Sales
California’s Lemon Law, part of the Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act, is designed to hold manufacturers accountable for defective vehicles under warranty. It primarily applies to cars purchased or leased from dealerships, but there’s an important wrinkle for private sales: if the manufacturer’s warranty is still in effect and transferable, the warranty typically follows the vehicle to you. In that scenario, your potential lemon claim is against the manufacturer—not the private seller—because the obligation to repair or repurchase comes from the manufacturer’s warranty, not the bill of sale between two private individuals.
To qualify, the problem usually must be a defect that substantially impairs the vehicle’s use, value, or safety, and the manufacturer (through an authorized dealership) must be given a reasonable number of chances to fix it. California’s “lemon law presumption” provides helpful guideposts: for example, multiple unsuccessful repair attempts for the same safety defect, or 30+ cumulative days in the shop within the first 18 months or 18,000 miles, can support a claim. Even if you’re outside those presumption windows, you may still have rights if the defect arose and persisted during the warranty period and the manufacturer had reasonable opportunities to repair.
If you bought the car privately and think the factory warranty still applies, focus on process and proof. Confirm the warranty is active and in your name (powertrain, bumper-to-bumper, emissions, hybrid/EV components, and any extended manufacturer warranties). Always use an authorized dealership for repairs so the manufacturer can’t argue improper service. Keep every record: repair orders, dates, mileage, parts replaced, and days out of service. If repairs aren’t successful, escalate a warranty claim with the manufacturer. While outcomes vary and nothing is guaranteed, potential remedies under the law can include repurchase or replacement, plus certain incidental costs, when the legal standards are met.
Why It Usually Doesn’t Cover Private Deals
The Lemon Law targets manufacturers and retail sellers, not casual private owners. A private party is typically not a “retail seller” under Song-Beverly, so the implied warranty protections that apply to dealer sales usually don’t apply to a neighbor or stranger selling a car in their driveway. Most private sales are “as-is,” meaning the private seller isn’t promising the vehicle is free of defects or agreeing to repair or refund if problems arise after the sale. Without an active, transferable manufacturer’s warranty, there is rarely a lemon law path for a private-party purchase.
There are also many common situations where the Lemon Law won’t help in a private sale: the car is out of factory warranty; the seller didn’t provide any written warranty of their own; the vehicle has a salvage or branded title; or repairs were done outside the manufacturer’s authorized network. In those scenarios, your dispute typically isn’t with the manufacturer under the Lemon Law. Other legal avenues—such as claims involving misrepresentation, odometer fraud, or failure to disclose a branded title—follow different rules and timelines and are separate from lemon law standards. Those issues can be serious, but they require a tailored legal assessment, not general lemon law assumptions.
Practical steps can improve your position before and after purchase. Before buying, get a pre-purchase inspection, review a vehicle history report, check open recalls by VIN, and confirm in writing whether any manufacturer warranty time or mileage remains and can be transferred. After purchase, if problems appear, verify warranty status immediately, use an authorized dealer for repairs, keep detailed records, and review your bill of sale and any written promises the seller made. If you’re unsure where you stand, a consultation with a lemon law attorney can help you understand whether you have manufacturer warranty remedies, a potential federal warranty claim (Magnuson-Moss), or another type of consumer claim.
This article is for informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Reading it does not create an attorney-client relationship with ZapLemon, and past results do not guarantee a similar outcome. Every situation is different, and you should consult an attorney for advice about your specific facts. If you believe your vehicle may qualify as a lemon, contact ZapLemon at [phone number] or [website].