Lemon Law Firm Guidance: Spotting Misrepresented Options

When a dealer tells you a vehicle “comes with” certain features, you expect to drive home with exactly what was promised. Yet many California buyers later discover that key options—advanced safety tech, towing packages, or even extended warranties—were missing, locked behind subscriptions, or different than advertised. This guide from ZapLemon explains how to spot misrepresented options, what documentation to gather, and how to report issues. It’s general information to help you get oriented, not legal advice.

Misrepresented Options: Common Red Flags in CA

Misrepresented options are promises or statements about a vehicle’s features, coverage, or condition that don’t match reality. In California, this can show up in new, used, and certified pre-owned sales. While the Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act (the “California lemon law”) mainly addresses persistent defects under warranty, misrepresentations can still matter—especially when a feature that motivated your purchase isn’t actually there or doesn’t function as described.

Watch for safety and tech features that were advertised but don’t appear on the car: missing blind-spot monitoring or adaptive cruise control; “premium audio” that’s actually the base system; or navigation and remote start that require a separate paid subscription. EV buyers should confirm battery size, DC fast-charging capability, included charge cables, and onboard charger speed. If a vehicle was presented as “Apple CarPlay/Android Auto equipped,” ensure it’s not a trial or hardware-limited version.

Other red flags include a car represented as “new” when it was a demo or service loaner; “certified” without the full inspection checklist or warranty booklet; and “towing package” that lacks the correct hitch, wiring, or upgraded cooling. Financial add-ons can be misrepresented too: GAP, service contracts, maintenance plans, nitrogen tires, or VIN etching that you didn’t expressly agree to, or that were bundled in the price via an addendum sticker. Be cautious if the dealer downplays the federally required Monroney label on new cars or contradicts the FTC Buyers Guide on used cars, or if the warranty status is vague or inconsistent with the manufacturer’s records.

Steps to Document and Report Dealer Misrepresentations

Start by gathering proof. Save the original online ad, screenshots, email or text threads, and any “we owe/due bill” promising specific items. Photograph the Monroney label (new cars), any dealer addendum sticker, and the window Buyers Guide (used cars). Keep copies of the retail installment sale contract, menu disclosures for add-ons, and warranty booklets. Run the VIN through the manufacturer’s website to pull an official build sheet or window sticker PDF, and check NHTSA’s site for open recalls. If a promised option is missing, take photos or short videos showing the dashboard menus, buttons, and connectors. Note: California is a two‑party consent state for recordings—get consent before recording calls.

Next, write a simple timeline: what was promised, what you discovered, and when. Email the sales manager or general manager, attach your evidence, and ask for a clear resolution in writing—delivery of the missing option, proper activation, a refund for add-ons, or another agreed remedy. If the issue involves a feature that requires subscription activation, request written confirmation of term and cost. Continue to use your warranty properly—schedule repairs for any defects and keep service records. If financing is involved and the deal terms were different than disclosed, save those documents and communications as well.

If the dealer won’t resolve it, consider filing complaints with agencies that handle auto sales issues in California. Options may include: California DMV Investigations (Record of Complaint, Form INV 172A), the California Attorney General’s Office, your County District Attorney’s Consumer Protection Unit, the FTC (for advertising practices), the CFPB (if financing disclosures are at issue), and the manufacturer’s customer care for warranty-related misstatements. These steps won’t guarantee a result, but they create a paper trail that can be useful if you consult a California lemon law attorney about persistent defects or broader misrepresentation concerns.

Misrepresented options can be frustrating and costly, but careful documentation and prompt reporting can protect your rights and help you understand your next steps. If your vehicle also has ongoing repair issues under warranty, you may want to learn how California’s lemon law applies to your situation. This article is for general informational purposes only, is not legal advice, and reading it does not create an attorney–client relationship. Attorney advertising. If you believe your vehicle may qualify as a lemon or you experienced dealer misrepresentations, contact ZapLemon at (310) 489-3017 or visit https://zaplemon.com to request a consultation.

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