Your parking brake is a critical safety system—not just a convenience for hills or tight parking. When it fails, rollaway risks and warning lights can turn everyday driving into a serious hazard. If you’re dealing with repeat parking brake problems in California, the state’s Lemon Law may offer protections. This article explains how the California Lemon Law (the Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act) applies to parking brake malfunctions, what “reasonable repair attempts” means, and practical steps to protect your rights—all in plain language.
California Lemon Law for Parking Brake Failures
The California Lemon Law requires manufacturers to repair warranty-covered defects within a reasonable number of attempts. Parking brake issues—whether with a manual lever, foot pedal, or electronic parking brake (EPB)—can qualify if they substantially impair the vehicle’s use, value, or safety. Symptoms can include rollaway on inclines, failure to hold or release, EPB warning lights, grinding or binding noises, or intermittent operation that’s hard to reproduce but still dangerous.
Under the law, the manufacturer (through an authorized dealership) gets a fair chance to diagnose and fix the defect while your vehicle is under the manufacturer’s warranty. If those efforts fall short after a reasonable number of tries, or the vehicle sits in the shop too long for warranty repairs, you may be entitled to legal remedies. Importantly, the repairs must be performed—or at least attempted—by a manufacturer-authorized facility, and the problem generally needs to have started during the warranty period.
Your best move is to document everything. Each time you visit the dealer, describe the parking brake problem in your own words and confirm the repair order shows your exact complaint (for example, “EPB fails to hold on incline,” “rolls back 2–3 feet,” “grinding noise when applying parking brake,” or “won’t disengage after start”). Save all invoices, towing receipts, texts or emails with the service advisor, and any videos showing the issue. Check for recalls at the NHTSA website and ask the dealer about Technical Service Bulletins (TSBs) related to your vehicle’s parking brake system.
When Parking Brake Issues Qualify as a Lemon
A vehicle may qualify as a lemon when a parking brake defect persists despite a reasonable number of repair attempts, or when it spends substantial time in the shop for warranty repairs. California’s Lemon Law includes a guideline known as the “presumption” period: within the first 18 months or 18,000 miles (whichever comes first), the law presumes your vehicle is a lemon if (1) the defect is likely to cause death or serious injury and the dealer tried to fix it at least two times, (2) the dealer tried to fix a non-safety defect at least four times, or (3) the vehicle was out of service for warranty repairs for more than 30 cumulative days. Even if you’re outside this window, you may still have a claim—the presumption just makes proof easier.
Real-world examples help. Repeated EPB warning lights with “no trouble found,” a car that rolls on a driveway despite the brake being applied, a parking brake that locks the rear wheels and won’t release, or a system that works intermittently after multiple software updates or actuator replacements—these are the kinds of issues that can substantially impact safety and value. If the dealer has made several attempts or your car has been down for weeks awaiting parts, your documentation can be key evidence of a persistent defect under California law.
If you’re facing ongoing parking brake failures, consider a few steps. Keep bringing the vehicle to an authorized dealer and continue documenting the problem; don’t ignore intermittent faults. Ask for copies of every repair order and confirm the mileage and dates are accurate. Maintain a simple timeline of repair attempts and days out of service. Then consult a California lemon law attorney to discuss your situation and options. Remedies under the law can include a refund or replacement vehicle in qualifying cases, but outcomes depend on the facts, and a consultation is the best way to understand your rights.
This article is for informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Reading it does not create an attorney–client relationship, and past results do not guarantee a similar outcome. Attorney advertising. If you believe your vehicle may qualify as a lemon due to parking brake malfunctions, contact ZapLemon for a consultation at [phone number] or [website]. We can review your repair history, warranty coverage, and next steps so you can make an informed decision.