When your car keeps visiting the shop more than your driveway, time matters. California’s lemon law offers strong protections, but there are firm deadlines and procedural steps that can affect your options. Below, we explain the key time limits in plain language and how a lemon law firm like ZapLemon helps you file on time and protect your rights.
California Lemon Law Deadlines Explained
California’s lemon law—part of the Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act—applies when a vehicle covered by a manufacturer’s warranty has defects the manufacturer or its dealers can’t fix after a reasonable number of attempts. It can cover new cars and many used cars sold with the balance of the original manufacturer’s warranty or a certified pre-owned warranty. Think repeated transmission shudder, brake failures, chronic check-engine lights, EV battery/charging faults, or infotainment systems that crash and disable safety features.
A common question is “How long do I have to file?” In California, the general statute of limitations to file a lemon law lawsuit is typically four years. Importantly, that clock often starts when you knew or reasonably should have known the manufacturer failed to repair the defect or honor the warranty—not necessarily on the purchase date. This timeline is separate from your warranty period; a vehicle must be covered by a manufacturer’s warranty for lemon law relief, but your filing deadline is a different legal concept. Some related claims (like breach of warranty under other laws) may follow different timing rules. Because details can vary, getting a case-specific assessment is important.
Don’t confuse the “18 months or 18,000 miles” rule with your filing deadline. That window creates a legal presumption that your car is a lemon if certain conditions are met, but you can still have a viable claim outside that window. Other timing traps include waiting for “just one more repair,” moving the car out of state, selling the vehicle, or entering an arbitration program without understanding how it might affect your case. In some circumstances, deadlines can be paused or affected by special rules, but it’s risky to assume that applies—speak with a professional to understand your specific situation.
How Lemon Law Firms Help You File on Time
A lemon law firm’s first job is to build a clear timeline. At ZapLemon, that typically means collecting your purchase or lease documents, confirming the in-service date, reviewing warranty coverage (including any certified pre-owned terms), and analyzing every repair order for dates, mileage, symptoms, and results. We map when the problems started, how many attempts were made, how long the car was out of service, and when the manufacturer may have failed to fix or honor the warranty. From there, we identify the likely statute of limitations and any other deadlines that could apply.
Next, firms manage the process so the calendar doesn’t manage you. That includes organizing records, communicating with the manufacturer, and preparing any necessary pre-suit notices or demands. If negotiation doesn’t resolve the matter, the firm can file a lawsuit before time runs out. If you’re considering manufacturer arbitration or have already started it, a firm can explain how that might interact with your timeline. Throughout, the goal is to keep your claim on track without promising any particular outcome.
You can help keep your case timely with a few practical steps: save every repair order and invoice; note dates, mileage, and symptoms each time; describe issues consistently (for example, “vehicle stalls when merging, loss of power, happens daily”); and check whether your vehicle is still under the manufacturer’s warranty. If problems keep returning, don’t wait until the last minute—an early conversation can clarify your options. For legal advice on your specific facts, a consultation with an attorney is necessary.
California’s lemon law offers real relief, but the clock matters. Understanding the difference between warranty coverage, the 18-month/18,000-mile presumption, and the four-year filing deadline can make or break a claim. A focused lemon law firm can help you calculate the correct timelines, gather the right evidence, and act before deadlines slip by.
This post is for informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Reading this blog does not create an attorney–client relationship. Every situation is different; consult an attorney about your specific facts. If you believe your vehicle may qualify as a lemon, contact ZapLemon at (844) 927-5366 or https://zaplemon.com.