California Lemon Law for Cooling System Failures

When your engine overheats or you keep finding green or orange coolant under your car, it’s more than a nuisance—it can be a sign of a persistent defect. California’s Lemon Law may offer protections if cooling system problems continue under the manufacturer’s warranty. Below, ZapLemon explains how the law applies to cooling failures and what steps you can take to protect your rights and your safety.

California Lemon Law for Car Cooling Failures

California’s Lemon Law—part of the Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act—generally covers new vehicles and many used vehicles that are still under the manufacturer’s warranty. If a defect substantially impairs the car’s use, value, or safety and the manufacturer can’t fix it after a reasonable number of attempts, you may have remedies under the law. Cooling system issues often qualify because repeated overheating can strand drivers, damage engines, and create safety risks.

Cooling systems include more than just coolant. Radiators, water pumps, thermostat housings, hoses, fans, sensors, heater cores, and head gaskets all work together to keep temperatures in a safe range. Common problems include sudden overheating, coolant leaks, white exhaust smoke from a blown head gasket, repeated low-coolant warnings, radiator or expansion tank cracks, failing fan relays, and air pockets that shops can’t purge. If your vehicle spends multiple days in the shop for the same cooling complaint, or the problem returns shortly after each repair, that pattern may matter under the Lemon Law.

California has a “lemon law presumption” during the first 18 months or 18,000 miles, but claims can still succeed outside that window—what matters is warranty coverage and repair history. Potential remedies can include a repurchase (buyback), a replacement vehicle, or a negotiated cash payment to keep the car, depending on the facts. The law may also require the manufacturer to pay reasonable attorneys’ fees if you prevail. Every case is different, and outcomes can’t be guaranteed—consultation with a lawyer is essential to understand your options.

Overheating and Coolant Leaks: Steps to Take

If your temperature gauge spikes or you see a “High Engine Temp” warning, pull over safely, shut the engine off, and call for a tow—driving while overheating can cause severe engine damage. Use the manufacturer’s roadside assistance when possible so the vehicle goes to an authorized dealer. Avoid opening the coolant reservoir while hot, and don’t top off with the wrong coolant type; both can worsen the issue and create safety hazards.

Documentation is your friend. At each visit, clearly describe your symptoms—how often the temperature rises, whether the heater blows cold, smells of sweet coolant, visible puddles, or steam from the hood. Ask the service advisor to list your complaint in your own words on the repair order and to include mileage, dates, and all parts replaced. Keep copies of every repair invoice, diagnostic notes, towing receipts, rental or loaner car records, and photos or videos of the gauge, warning messages, or leaks. Recurrent issues like “customer states vehicle still overheating” help show a pattern that may be important under the law.

If the problem returns after several repairs, consider escalating. Ask the dealership to check for Technical Service Bulletins (TSBs), prior repair attempts by other dealers, and whether a pressure test, dye test, fan operation test, or block test was performed. Track “days out of service”—in California, extended time in the shop can be significant. When you’ve had multiple attempts with no lasting fix, or the vehicle has been out of service for a long stretch, it may be time to speak with a lemon law attorney. ZapLemon can review your repair history, warranty status, and timeline so you can make an informed decision.

This article is for general informational purposes only, is not legal advice, and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Results cannot be guaranteed; every situation is unique and requires a personalized evaluation. If you believe your vehicle may qualify as a lemon due to repeated overheating or coolant leaks, contact ZapLemon for a consultation at [phone number] or visit [website]. Attorney advertising. Consultations are necessary to obtain legal advice for your specific circumstances.

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