California Lemon Law: Reading TSBs With Your Advisor

Technical Service Bulletins (TSBs) can be confusing, but they’re often a key piece of the puzzle when you’re dealing with ongoing vehicle problems. If you’re in California and wondering how the Lemon Law might apply to your situation, learning how to read and discuss TSBs with your service advisor can help you document issues and make informed next steps. Below, ZapLemon explains what TSBs mean for you and how to review them effectively—without legal jargon.

California Lemon Law: What TSBs Mean for You

A Technical Service Bulletin is a notice from the vehicle manufacturer that gives dealerships guidance on diagnosing and repairing known issues. Unlike a recall, a TSB doesn’t typically involve a government-mandated safety fix and doesn’t automatically require the manufacturer to contact every owner. Instead, TSBs help service departments identify patterns—like a certain engine sensor failing or an infotainment system rebooting—and recommend specific repairs, parts, or software updates to resolve them.

Under California’s Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act (often called the California Lemon Law), a vehicle may qualify for relief if a substantial defect that began during the warranty wasn’t fixed after a reasonable number of repair attempts, or the vehicle was out of service for a significant number of days. A TSB by itself doesn’t make a car a “lemon,” and it’s not a guarantee of a buyback or replacement. But TSBs can be important evidence that the manufacturer knows about a recurring problem and has prescribed a repair path—especially when your repair orders show repeated attempts following the same TSB and the problem keeps coming back.

Think of TSBs as a roadmap for your documentation. If your advisor works on your vehicle using a specific TSB—say, a transmission shudder procedure, a battery management system update on an EV, or a fix for a persistent check engine light—ask that the TSB number and version appear on your repair order. Keep copies of every repair invoice, note the dates, mileage, and symptoms, and track whether the same issue reappears after a TSB-driven repair. If the defect continues despite following the manufacturer’s guidance, your paper trail may help a California lemon law attorney evaluate your situation.

Reviewing TSBs With Your Service Advisor: Tips

Before your appointment, write down your symptoms in plain language and gather prior repair orders. You can search the NHTSA database for TSBs or simply ask your service advisor whether any TSBs apply to your VIN and build date. When you arrive, request that the advisor show you any relevant TSBs (or summarize them) and explain whether the recommended procedure, parts, or software are available at the dealership.

During the write-up, ask for clear documentation. Request that any applicable TSB number be listed on the repair order, along with your exact symptoms (“vehicle stalls when slowing to a stop,” “screen freezes in hot weather,” “driver door won’t lock intermittently”). Ask about parts availability and estimated timelines, whether the repair is covered under your new vehicle or powertrain warranty, and if a manufacturer “case” number will be opened. If the problem is tricky to reproduce, offer a test drive with a technician and describe the conditions that trigger the issue—temperature, speed, road type, state of charge for EVs, and so on.

After the visit, keep copies of the final repair invoice, any software version notes, and any diagnostic codes listed. If the problem returns, schedule service promptly and refer back to the earlier TSB in your description. Stay polite and consistent: follow recommended TSB procedures, avoid declining suggested updates without a clear reason, and continue documenting. If repeated TSB-based repairs don’t resolve the defect, consider speaking with a California lemon law professional. ZapLemon can review your records and discuss your options in a consultation.

This article is for informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Reading this post does not create an attorney–client relationship with ZapLemon, and no result is promised or guaranteed. Laws are complex and fact-specific; you should consult an attorney about your particular situation. If you believe your vehicle may qualify as a lemon, contact ZapLemon at [phone number] or [website]. We’re here to answer questions, review your repair history, and help you understand your next steps.

Ready to See If Your Car Qualifies?

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