Persistent dashboard lights and recurring OBD-II codes can be more than a nuisance—they may signal a defect the manufacturer hasn’t fixed under warranty. If your check engine, transmission, airbag, ABS, hybrid/EV, or ADAS warning lights keep returning after multiple dealer visits, California’s lemon law may offer remedies. This article explains how persistent warning codes are treated under California law and how to document your repair history in a way that protects your potential claim with ZapLemon’s help.
What Persistent Warning Codes Mean Under CA Law
In California, the Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act (often called the “lemon law”) covers new and certain used vehicles sold with a manufacturer’s warranty. A car can qualify as a lemon when a defect that affects the vehicle’s use, value, or safety isn’t fixed after a reasonable number of repair attempts during the warranty period. Persistent warning codes—like a recurring P0420 catalyst code, P0300 misfire, transmission control codes, airbag/SRS lights, or hybrid battery/charging faults—can be evidence that a defect is ongoing, even if the car sometimes seems to drive normally between visits.
California also includes a “lemon law presumption” within the first 18 months or 18,000 miles (whichever comes first). During that window, the law presumes the manufacturer had a reasonable opportunity to repair if, for example, the same issue was attempted four or more times, a serious safety-related defect was attempted two or more times, or the vehicle was out of service for a total of more than 30 days for warranty repairs. These are guidelines, not hard limits, and claims outside that window can still be viable—documentation is key. Warning lights and fault codes that reappear shortly after a repair may help show that the underlying problem hasn’t been corrected.
Intermittent faults count, too. If your dash light turns off on its own or the dealer clears codes and sends you home, that doesn’t necessarily defeat a claim. What matters is whether the defect persists or recurs and whether it materially affects use, value, or safety. For example, an airbag light that appears sporadically, an EV that drops into reduced-power mode with high-voltage system codes, or a transmission that triggers limp mode can all raise serious safety and reliability concerns. The bottom line: recurring warning codes can help establish a pattern of a defect that the manufacturer has not fixed within a reasonable number of attempts.
Steps to Document Repairs and Protect Your Claim
Start by capturing the issue as it happens. Take clear photos or short videos of the warning lights on your dash, and, if you have access to a code reader, screenshot the OBD-II code(s) and freeze-frame data. Note the date, mileage, driving conditions (e.g., highway speeds, stop-and-go traffic, uphill grades), and any symptoms (stalling, loss of power, rough shifting, brake pulsing, sudden shutoff). Avoid clearing codes at home; let the dealer read them. Ask the service department to print the diagnostic scan reports and include all codes and technical service bulletins (TSBs) on your repair order.
Every time you visit a dealer, make sure the repair order accurately states your concern in your own words—“customer states check engine light on; loss of power; code P0300 present”—before you sign. Keep copies of all repair orders, invoices (even $0 warranty invoices), parts replaced, and any tow, rental, or loaner documentation. Track days out of service from drop-off to pickup; those days may count toward lemon law thresholds. If a warning light returns shortly after a repair, return to the dealer promptly and reference the prior visit so the record shows this is a repeat concern.
If repairs drag on, consider escalating. Ask for a meeting with the service manager, request involvement from the manufacturer’s regional representative, and inquire about any open recalls or updated software/part revisions. Maintain a simple timeline summarizing dates, mileage, codes, and outcomes for each visit. Be polite but firm: you’re seeking a complete fix under warranty. Deadlines may apply to lemon law claims, and facts vary, so a consultation can help you understand next steps. ZapLemon can review your documents and discuss options like further repair opportunities, a buyback, or a replacement if the law supports it.
ZapLemon helps Californians make sense of persistent warning codes and repeated repair visits by translating technical symptoms into a clear warranty story. While this article is for general information only and is not legal advice, it highlights how recurring fault codes, accurate repair orders, and careful recordkeeping can be crucial under California’s lemon law. Reading this page does not create an attorney–client relationship, and results are not guaranteed. This is attorney advertising. If you believe your vehicle may qualify as a lemon, contact ZapLemon at (310) 489-3017 or visit https://zaplemon.com to request a consultation.