California Lemon Law for Apple CarPlay That Doesn’t Work

Apple CarPlay is supposed to make driving easier—hands-free calls, turn-by-turn navigation, music, and messages integrated into your dashboard. But when CarPlay drops connections, freezes, or won’t launch at all, the problem can quickly become more than an inconvenience. For California drivers, repeated tech failures can raise a serious legal question: could a malfunctioning CarPlay system make your vehicle a “lemon” under California’s lemon law? Below, we explain how the law works in plain language and what steps to take if your infotainment issues won’t go away.

Can Apple CarPlay Problems Be a California Lemon?

Not every glitch qualifies as a lemon, but California’s Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act (often called the California lemon law) can cover persistent infotainment defects when they substantially impair the use, value, or safety of the vehicle and the manufacturer cannot fix them within a reasonable number of attempts. CarPlay is not just a convenience feature—if navigation fails, calls drop, the backup camera display freezes, or audio routes unpredictably through the system, it can affect safe driving and core functionality. When the underlying cause is in the vehicle’s hardware or factory software—head unit, wiring, microphone, USB-C/USB-A ports, wireless CarPlay module, or the car’s operating system—it may fall within warranty coverage.

The key is distinguishing a vehicle defect from a phone/app issue. If CarPlay fails across multiple iPhones, different iOS versions, and both wired and wireless connections, that points to a vehicle-side problem. Likewise, if the dealer documents replacing the infotainment control module, antenna, wiring harness, or performing repeated software flashes and the issue returns, that pattern can support a defect under the vehicle’s warranty. By contrast, a one-off problem tied to a damaged cable or an outdated phone operating system is unlikely to qualify.

California law doesn’t require a specific number of repair attempts in every case, but there are commonly cited guidelines: multiple unsuccessful repair attempts for the same nonconformity, or the vehicle being out of service for a significant number of days (often discussed as 30 or more cumulative days) during the warranty period. There is also a legal “presumption” window in the first 18 months or 18,000 miles where certain thresholds can make claims easier to prove, though potential claims can exist outside that window if the warranty is still in effect. Every situation is fact-specific, so careful documentation and timely action matter.

How to Track CarPlay Issues and When to Call ZapLemon

Start by tracking symptoms in a simple log. Note the date, time, mileage, weather, and what exactly happened: dropouts during calls, black screen, “CarPlay not available” messages, GPS drifting off-route, Siri not hearing commands, audio cutting in and out, or steering-wheel controls failing with CarPlay active. Record whether the issue is wired or wireless, what cable you used, the iPhone model and iOS version, and whether other phones had the same problem. Short videos or photos taken safely while parked can be very helpful.

Get every dealer visit documented. Ask for repair orders that clearly list your complaint (“customer states …”), the technician’s findings, and all work performed: software updates, TSBs (Technical Service Bulletins), module replacements, connector cleanings, reprogramming, and road tests. Keep copies of invoices, warranty printouts, and any notes about parts on backorder or days your car was at the dealership, including loaner or rental records. If the dealer says “operating as designed,” request they document the test steps they took, and ask them to test with a shop-owned iPhone and known-good cable.

Consider contacting ZapLemon if the problem persists after multiple repair attempts, the vehicle has been out of service for an extended period, the issue affects safety (for example, freezing screens that interrupt the backup camera or navigation), or the dealer acknowledges a known defect but can’t provide a lasting fix. You don’t have to wait until you’re at your wit’s end—an early consultation can help you understand your options and timelines before memories and paperwork get harder to organize.

This article is for general informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Reading it does not create an attorney–client relationship with ZapLemon. Every case depends on its own facts, documentation, and warranty terms. If you believe your vehicle may qualify as a lemon due to Apple CarPlay or other infotainment problems, contact ZapLemon at [phone number] or visit [website] to request a consultation. Attorney Advertising. Past results do not guarantee similar outcomes.

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