Buying a rebuilt-title car can be a smart way to save money, but it also raises questions when problems keep coming back. Many Californians ask whether the state’s Lemon Law can help if a rebuilt vehicle is under some form of warranty. Below, ZapLemon explains how California’s Lemon Law treats rebuilt titles and when a warranty can make a difference—so you can make informed choices about your next steps.
How California Lemon Law Treats Rebuilt Titles
California’s Lemon Law (the Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act) protects consumers when a vehicle sold with an express warranty has defects that the warrantor can’t fix after a reasonable number of attempts. The law can apply to new vehicles and to certain used vehicles that come with a written warranty. It doesn’t automatically reject a car just because it has a “rebuilt” or “salvage” title—the key issue is whether there’s a valid express warranty and whether the defect falls within that warranty’s coverage.
That said, rebuilt-title vehicles often face an extra hurdle: many manufacturers void their new-car warranties once a car is branded salvage. If the manufacturer warranty was voided before your purchase, the Lemon Law usually won’t apply to that manufacturer because there’s no express warranty to enforce. However, some rebuilt cars are sold with a dealer-provided limited warranty or a third-party written warranty. If a legitimate express warranty exists, California’s Lemon Law may apply to the warrantor, but only within the warranty’s scope (for example, a 60-day powertrain warranty for engine/transmission issues).
Another practical wrinkle is causation. With rebuilt titles, manufacturers or dealers may argue that today’s defect stems from prior collision, flood, or improper repair work—not from a warrantable defect. Consumers generally need to show that the covered defect substantially impairs use, value, or safety, and that the warrantor had a reasonable number of chances to fix it. Keeping detailed repair orders, photos, and technician notes can be critical. Example: if your rebuilt-title SUV has repeated infotainment system failures and the service records point to a software fault unrelated to the prior collision, that may strengthen the warranty claim.
When a Rebuilt Title Car Is Covered Under Warranty
A rebuilt-title car may be “under warranty” in a few ways: a dealer might include a 30–90 day limited warranty; a manufacturer may choose (rarely) to honor portions of coverage despite the salvage brand; or you might have a written third-party warranty document. Be aware that a service contract or “extended protection plan” is not the same as an express warranty under California’s Lemon Law. The Lemon Law typically applies to written warranties from a seller or manufacturer—not to service contracts from separate companies—though those contracts can still help with repairs.
Coverage is only as strong as the warranty’s terms. A narrow powertrain warranty won’t typically cover issues like window regulators, infotainment bugs, or ADAS camera faults; a broader bumper-to-bumper warranty may. For Lemon Law purposes, you usually need defects that arise and are presented for repair during the warranty period, and a reasonable number of repair attempts (or significant time out of service). The Lemon Law’s “presumptions” about how many attempts is “reasonable” are nuanced and often tied to new vehicles, so used or rebuilt-title cases are highly fact-specific.
If you’re dealing with persistent problems, take a few steps: confirm in writing that your warranty is active; read the warranty booklet to see what’s covered and excluded; ask the manufacturer to verify whether the salvage title affects coverage; and report issues promptly. Keep every repair order, even if the shop says “no problem found.” For example, if your rebuilt-title sedan is sold with a 60-day dealer warranty and suffers repeated transmission shudder and stalling documented on three visits, your paper trail may help show reasonable repair attempts. If your EV’s high-voltage battery fails but the manufacturer claims the salvage status voids coverage, it may still be worth having ZapLemon assess whether any express warranty applies and what options you may have.
Rebuilt-title vehicles and warranties can make California Lemon Law questions more complicated—but not impossible. The outcome often turns on whether a valid express warranty exists and whether the defect is covered and not tied to prior damage. This article is for general information only and is not legal advice. Reading it does not create an attorney–client relationship. If you believe your rebuilt-title vehicle is experiencing recurring, warranty-covered defects, contact ZapLemon for a consultation at (310) 489-3017 or visit https://zaplemon.com. Attorney Advertising. Results depend on the facts of each case.