If you drive an electric vehicle in California and keep running into charging problems, you might be wondering whether those issues count toward a lemon law claim. One piece of evidence that’s growing in importance is your public charger history—those session details in your app, receipts, and screenshots from networks like Electrify America, EVgo, ChargePoint, and Tesla. Below, ZapLemon explains why public charger logs can matter, what they can and cannot prove, and how California law generally treats these records. This is general information, not legal advice, and your situation may be different.
Why Public Charger Logs Matter in Lemon Claims
Public charging records can help paint a clear picture of recurring EV problems, especially when issues happen outside the dealership. If your car refuses to initiate a DC fast charge, drops connection mid-session, or throttles speed far below normal despite good conditions, logs can show the date, time, station ID, and error messages. When a dealer says, “No problem found,” but your app history shows multiple failed sessions across different networks and locations, that pattern can help corroborate that the issue is with the vehicle, not just one bad charger.
These logs can also support key lemon law elements like frequency and impact. California’s Lemon Law (the Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act) generally looks at whether a defect covered by warranty substantially impairs use, value, or safety and whether the manufacturer had a reasonable number of chances to fix it. While the strongest evidence is still repair orders and days the car spent in the shop, charger logs can fill in gaps by showing how often problems occur, when they started, and how they affect real-world use—missed work, added charging time, or tows after failed sessions.
At the same time, context is everything. A single failed charge at a known out-of-service station likely won’t move the needle. But consistent failures across different stations, climates, and times—paired with service visits, software updates, and technician notes—can give real weight to your claim. Helpful steps include saving screenshots, exporting session data if your network allows it, noting station numbers, and capturing on-screen error codes. If your vehicle app or the charging network lets you download a CSV or detailed session report, keep that too.
How California Law Views Public Charging Records
California lemon claims typically turn on warranty-covered defects and the manufacturer’s repair opportunities, not just consumer logs. However, public charging records may be considered relevant evidence that supports your account of repeated issues, especially when the dealer cannot replicate the problem. Think of logs as supporting documentation that complements official repair histories, warranty bulletins, and any telematics or diagnostic data the manufacturer maintains.
If a case goes to court, evidence rules matter. To be persuasive, charging data often needs to be authenticated and shown to be reliable—ideally as business records from the charging network or manufacturer, not solely screenshots. In California, business records can sometimes be admitted under Evidence Code section 1271 if a proper foundation is laid, typically through a custodian or knowledgeable witness. Pure screenshots aren’t necessarily useless, but original exports, metadata, and statements from the data holder can carry more weight. Keep your files in their original format when possible, and avoid editing images.
Privacy and accuracy also come into play. Networks and manufacturers hold large amounts of electronic data, and access may depend on your user agreements or a formal legal process. In some situations, consumers can request their personal data directly from charging networks under California privacy laws, which may help preserve evidence. Just remember: charging logs alone do not prove a defect. They are most useful when combined with dealer work orders, diagnostic codes, and a clear timeline of warranty repair attempts. When in doubt, consult a professional about how to gather and preserve these materials.
This article is for informational purposes only, is not legal advice, and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Results depend on the facts of each case. If you believe your vehicle may qualify as a lemon—or you need help organizing public charger logs, repair orders, and warranty records—contact ZapLemon at [phone number] or [website] for a consultation. Attorney advertising.