When a dealership keeps saying “no problem found,” refuses to schedule you, or won’t open a repair order, it’s more than frustrating—it can also jeopardize your California lemon law rights because you’re losing the paper trail that shows repeated issues. This article explains, in plain English, what lemon lawyers commonly advise consumers to do when a dealer won’t cooperate, why documentation matters under California’s Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act, and the practical next steps you can take to protect yourself. This information is general and not legal advice.
Dealer Refusing Repairs? What Lemon Lawyers Advise
If a service advisor tells you “we can’t duplicate the concern,” “it’s normal,” or “we can’t take the car without an appointment,” ask for a written repair order anyway. In California, your warranty rights are tied to the manufacturer, but the dealership is the authorized repair facility—your goal is to create a clear record that you presented the vehicle for repair. Describe symptoms (not diagnoses) in detail: when it happens, speeds, warning lights, weather, videos, and how often. A repair order marked “could not verify” is still evidence that you tried to get the defect fixed.
If you meet resistance, escalate politely. Ask to speak with the service manager, request a road test with a technician, and leave the vehicle if needed so they have time to reproduce the issue. Email your written description to the service department so there’s a timestamped record, and ask them to attach it to the repair order. If the dealer cites “no codes,” ask that the scan report be attached to the paperwork. If they claim aftermarket parts void your warranty, remember that the manufacturer generally must show the modification caused the problem to deny coverage; ask them to note their reasoning in writing.
When a dealer still refuses, try another authorized dealer and contact the manufacturer’s customer care line to open a case number. Request a field technician visit if the issue is intermittent. For persistent refusals, send a dated letter or email to the manufacturer requesting warranty performance and keep proof of delivery. Track every day the car is out of service, every repair attempt, and any safety-related symptoms (for example, stalling at highway speeds, brake warnings, EV battery shutdowns). Lemon lawyers often stress this: don’t get stuck arguing at the counter—build a calm, thorough paper trail that shows you gave the manufacturer a fair chance to fix the defect.
California Lemon Law: Records, Warranty, Next Steps
California’s lemon law (the Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act) generally applies to vehicles covered by a manufacturer’s warranty, new or used, when defects substantially impair use, value, or safety and the manufacturer can’t repair them after a reasonable number of attempts. The law includes helpful guidelines—such as four or more repair attempts for the same issue, two or more for a serious safety defect, or 30+ total days out of service within the first 18 months or 18,000 miles—but you can still have a claim even if you don’t fit these exact numbers. Potential remedies can include a repurchase or replacement, but outcomes depend on facts, timing, and documentation.
Your records make or break a lemon claim. Save every repair order and invoice (including “no problem found”), towing records, rental/loaner paperwork, and communications with the dealer or manufacturer. Keep photos or videos of symptoms like a transmission shudder, repeated infotainment reboots, warning messages, or a power loss event. Maintain a simple timeline with dates, odometer readings, and days out of service. If a dealer refuses to write an order, note the date, person you spoke with, and what was said; follow up by email so you have a written record.
When you’ve documented repeated defects or refusals, consider your next steps. Some manufacturers use dispute programs or arbitration; read the fine print and understand it’s optional in many cases. Deadlines matter—California claims are time-sensitive—so learn your options early. Because every situation is unique, a consultation can help you evaluate whether your records show a “reasonable number of attempts,” whether the defect substantially impairs use, value, or safety, and how to approach a demand. If you think your vehicle may qualify as a lemon, contact ZapLemon through zaplemon.com to discuss your situation.
This article is for informational purposes only, not legal advice, and reading it does not create an attorney-client relationship. Past results do not guarantee a similar outcome. If you believe your vehicle may qualify as a lemon or a dealer is refusing repairs, contact ZapLemon at zaplemon.com to request a consultation and get guidance for your specific circumstances.