If your car keeps going back to the shop for the same problem, you’re probably wondering whether California’s Lemon Law can force a buyback and what happens if the manufacturer drags its feet. This article explains, in plain English, how buybacks are decided under the Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act (California’s Lemon Law) and what steps consumers can take to enforce a buyback order. It’s designed to help you understand the process, spot key deadlines, and stay organized—so you can decide whether to speak with a lawyer about your options.
California Lemon Law: How Buybacks Are Decided
California’s Lemon Law generally applies when a new or certified pre-owned vehicle under warranty has a substantial defect that the manufacturer or its dealers can’t fix after a reasonable number of repair attempts. “Substantial” means the issue affects the use, value, or safety of the car—think recurring transmission shudder, brake failures, stalling engines, high-voltage battery faults in EVs, or a constant check-engine light that won’t resolve. The law also considers time out of service; extended days in the shop for warranty repairs can support a lemon claim even if the exact number of visits varies.
When a vehicle qualifies, the manufacturer must typically choose between replacing the vehicle or repurchasing it (a “buyback”). A buyback is meant to put you close to where you started financially by refunding the purchase price and certain collateral charges such as taxes, license fees, and often incidental costs like towing or rental cars that were reasonably incurred due to the defect. California law also allows a mileage deduction (often called a “usage offset”) based on the miles driven before the first repair attempt for the defect; it’s a statutory formula, so the exact deduction depends on your facts.
Evidence drives the decision. Clear, consistent repair records are crucial—repair orders, invoices, and warranty paperwork that show dates, mileage, and the complaint described to the service writer. Consumers help themselves by describing symptoms the same way each visit and saving communications with the dealership and manufacturer. If you’re unsure whether your issue qualifies, review your warranty booklet, make a timeline of repair attempts, and consider a consultation to understand how the law may apply to your situation.
Enforcing Buyback Orders in California: What to Do
Sometimes the manufacturer agrees to a repurchase or an arbitrator or court orders one—but the process bogs down. Enforcement is about turning a promise or decision into action: arranging the return, finalizing paperwork, transferring title, and disbursing funds. Program rules, settlement agreements, and court orders often set timelines and detailed steps, so start by gathering the written documents that control your specific case and noting any compliance deadlines.
If there’s a delay, escalate in writing. Send a concise, dated letter or email to the manufacturer and any program administrator confirming the buyback terms, listing outstanding items (payoff, payoff authorization, DMV/title, mileage at surrender, refund breakdown), and proposing several surrender dates. Keep communicating in writing, ask for a single point of contact, and save every message. Continue to track vehicle storage, insurance, and any out-of-pocket costs so you have a record if reimbursement is permitted under your agreement or the law.
If noncompliance persists, additional legal steps may be available. Depending on the situation, that can include following the arbitration program’s enforcement procedures, seeking court confirmation of an award, or pursuing court enforcement of a judgment. California’s Lemon Law provides for consumer remedies and, in some circumstances, penalties for willful noncompliance, but whether those apply depends on the facts. Because enforcement choices can have consequences, consider speaking with a California lemon law attorney who can review your documents and outline your options. In the meantime, keep your records organized, avoid making vehicle changes, and verify that your loan payoff, registration, and insurance remain current until the buyback is completed.
This article is for general informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Reading it does not create an attorney–client relationship with ZapLemon. Attorney advertising; past results do not guarantee similar outcomes. If you believe your vehicle may qualify as a lemon or you need help enforcing a buyback order, contact ZapLemon for a consultation at (310) 489-3017 or visit https://zaplemon.com. Keep your repair records handy, note key dates and mileage, and reach out so we can discuss your situation and next steps.