When a modern vehicle’s digital dashboard goes dark, it’s more than an inconvenience—it can affect basic safety information like speed, warning lights, and driver-assistance alerts. Many California drivers are discovering that repeated dashboard display blackouts are difficult to fix, even after multiple visits to the dealership. This article explains how California’s lemon law may apply to recurring display failures and offers practical steps to document the problem for a potential claim with ZapLemon.
Dashboard Blackouts and California Lemon Law
A dashboard blackout can involve a blank instrument cluster, a frozen infotainment screen, loss of backup camera or climate controls, or intermittent display flickering. Drivers often report that the screen boots, crashes, then restarts while driving, or that critical icons and gauges simply vanish. Beyond frustration, a blackout can raise safety concerns if the speedometer, gear indicator, turn signals, warning lamps, or ADAS alerts are unavailable.
California’s Lemon Law (the Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act) protects consumers when a manufacturer cannot repair a warranty-covered defect after a reasonable number of attempts. The law applies to many new vehicles and some used vehicles that are still under the manufacturer’s warranty, including many certified pre-owned cars. In plain terms, if your vehicle has a covered defect that substantially impairs use, value, or safety—and the automaker can’t fix it within a reasonable opportunity—the law may provide remedies.
Dashboard display blackouts can qualify as a “nonconformity” when they substantially impair the vehicle’s use, value, or safety. A “reasonable number” of repair attempts depends on the facts, but evidence like repeated software flashes, head-unit or cluster replacements, and continued failures can be important. California also recognizes a lemon law “presumption” in the first 18 months or 18,000 miles if certain repair thresholds or 30+ cumulative days out of service are met. Remedies can include repurchase, replacement, or other relief as provided by law; outcomes depend on each case’s specific facts and the warranty.
How to Document Display Failures for Your Claim
Start a simple log the moment you notice display issues. Note the date, mileage, weather, how long you were driving, and what exactly failed (for example, “instrument cluster went black, no speedometer, no turn signals displayed, came back after 3 minutes”). If safe to do so, take brief photos or videos showing the blackout, error messages, or reboot cycles. Try to capture patterns, such as failures after overnight parking, hitting bumps, or using CarPlay/Android Auto.
Each time you visit the dealership, make sure your complaint is written clearly on the repair order in your own words. Ask the service advisor to include details like “screen goes black while driving,” “speedometer inoperative,” or “backup camera intermittently unavailable,” not just a generic “check infotainment.” Request copies of all repair orders and final invoices, even if the result says “no trouble found.” Document software versions, module replacements, TSBs performed, and any factory technical support cases opened by the dealer.
Keep all related records together: warranty booklets, recall notices, dealership texts/emails, tow bills, rental or rideshare receipts, and manufacturer case numbers. Avoid clearing settings or factory-resetting the system right before service visits, because that can erase error logs the dealer needs to diagnose the issue. If the problem persists after multiple repair attempts or your vehicle spends extended time in the shop, consider speaking with ZapLemon about your rights and next steps under California law—an individualized consultation is necessary for legal advice.
Attorney Advertising. This post is for informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Reading this blog does not create an attorney–client relationship, and past results do not guarantee similar outcomes. If you are experiencing dashboard display blackouts and believe your vehicle may qualify as a lemon, contact ZapLemon to request a consultation at [phone number] or visit [website].