If your car stalls over and over—at stoplights, while merging, or without warning on the freeway—it isn’t just frustrating; it can be dangerous. California’s Lemon Law, part of the Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act, may offer remedies when a vehicle under warranty has a persistent defect that the manufacturer can’t fix after a reasonable number of attempts. Repeated stalling is a common scenario that can meet this standard because it directly affects safety, use, and value.
Below, we explain how California law looks at repeated stalling and what you can do to document repairs and protect your rights. This article is for general information only and isn’t legal advice. If you think your vehicle may qualify, the team at ZapLemon can review your situation and help you understand your options under California law.
Remember: every case is unique. The facts—your warranty, repair history, mileage, and timing—matter. A brief consultation can help you understand how the law may apply to your situation.
What Repeated Stalling Means Under California Lemon Law
In everyday terms, repeated stalling means your car shuts off unexpectedly or loses power while driving or idling, and it keeps happening even after you’ve brought it in for repairs. Under California Lemon Law, this can be a “nonconformity”—a defect covered by the manufacturer’s warranty that substantially impairs the vehicle’s use, value, or safety. Because stalling can create serious safety risks, it often qualifies as a substantial impairment when it persists.
California’s Lemon Law presumption (often called the “18 months/18,000 miles” rule) can make claims easier to prove if the issue happens early. The presumption may apply if, within the first 18 months or 18,000 miles from delivery: (1) the manufacturer or its dealer made two or more repair attempts for a defect likely to cause death or serious injury if driven (stalling can fall into this), (2) four or more attempts were made for the same defect, or (3) the vehicle was out of service for warranty repairs for a total of 30 or more days. Even if you’re outside those time/mileage limits, you can still have a valid claim; you just won’t get the benefit of the presumption and will need to prove the defect and repair history.
Stalling can result from many issues: fuel pump or injector problems, engine control module or sensor faults (crankshaft/camshaft sensors, MAF), throttle body or EGR malfunctions, wiring or ground faults, software bugs, transmission or torque converter failures, and for hybrids/EVs, inverter or battery management faults and sudden loss of propulsion. Intermittent problems count—stalling that happens “sometimes” is still a defect if the dealer can’t fix it under warranty after reasonable attempts.
How to Track Repairs and Preserve Your Lemon Rights
First, take the car to an authorized dealership for your brand whenever the stalling occurs, especially while the vehicle is under the manufacturer’s warranty. Ask the service advisor to write your exact complaint on the Repair Order (RO) in your own words: when it stalls, speed, temperature, dashboard lights, and whether the engine dies completely or surges. Before you leave, confirm the RO shows the dates, mileage in/out, and all diagnostic steps, parts replaced, software updates, and “no trouble found” notes. Always request a copy of every RO and final invoice—these are the backbone of any lemon claim.
Keep a simple repair log at home. Write down each stalling event with date, mileage, speed, fuel level, weather, and what you were doing (turning, braking, cruising). Note tow bills, rental/loaner days, and total “days out of service.” If it’s safe, short video clips of the stall, warning lights, or no-start condition can be helpful. Avoid modifications or aftermarket tunes, use the correct fuel, perform scheduled maintenance, and address any open recalls or Technical Service Bulletins—these steps help avoid arguments that the issue was caused by misuse or neglect.
If the problem keeps coming back, politely escalate. Ask the dealer to open a case with the manufacturer and get a case number. You may be offered arbitration; this is optional. Preserve your rights by continuing to bring the car in when it stalls rather than living with the issue or only visiting independent shops (warranty repairs should be done by the dealer). When you’re ready, speak with a lemon law professional. ZapLemon can review your paperwork, timeline, and warranty to help you understand whether your facts fit California’s Lemon Law framework.
This article is for general informational purposes only, does not constitute legal advice, and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Past results don’t guarantee future outcomes. If you believe your vehicle’s repeated stalling may qualify under California Lemon Law, contact ZapLemon for a consultation at [phone number] or visit www.ZapLemon.com. A quick review of your repair history can help you understand your options and next steps.