If your car keeps going back to the dealership for the same problems, careful repair tracking can make a real difference. Under California’s Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act (often called the California Lemon Law), documentation helps show what happened, when it happened, and how many opportunities the manufacturer had to fix it. Below are plain-language tips from a lemon law lawyer’s perspective to help you build a clean, credible record—so you can understand your options and talk with a professional about next steps.
Why Repair Tracking Matters in California Lemon Law
California’s lemon law looks at whether a manufacturer had a reasonable number of chances to repair a defect that’s covered by warranty and substantially impairs the use, value, or safety of the vehicle. That analysis is tied to facts like dates, mileage, and the nature of each repair attempt. If you keep clear records, you’re not relying on memory—you’re showing a precise timeline.
Well-organized repair records turn everyday frustration into usable evidence. For example, if your SUV stalls at intersections, your paperwork may show four separate visits for the same stalling complaint, each with the mileage in/out and the work performed. Or, if your EV sits at the dealer for weeks awaiting parts, your records can show days out of service. These details help illustrate patterns, such as repeated “no problem found” results or short-lived fixes that don’t resolve the issue.
Consumers sometimes assume that verbal assurances are enough. Unfortunately, they rarely are. Service departments are busy, and what you explain to an advisor may not end up on the work order. That’s why lemon law lawyers emphasize getting your “customer states” complaint written exactly as you report it (e.g., “vehicle shudders on acceleration between 20–35 mph,” “backup camera intermittently black screen,” “AC blows warm after 20 minutes”). Accurate, consistent phrasing across visits is one of the best ways to show a recurring defect and the dealer’s attempts to fix it.
What to Save: Work Orders, Dates, and Mileage
First, save every repair order and final invoice, even if the dealer didn’t charge you. These documents should show the date in/date out, mileage in/mileage out, your complaint as written, the cause found (if any), and the corrective action. Ask for copies of warranty approvals, parts orders, and any technical service bulletins (TSBs) referenced. If you received a loaner or rental, keep those agreements and receipts as proof of days your vehicle was unavailable.
Second, create a simple log you can update after each visit. A basic spreadsheet works: include columns for visit number, date in/out, mileage in/out, “customer states” complaint, diagnosis, repairs performed, and outcome (e.g., “no fault found,” “software update applied,” “part back-ordered”). Add a column for “evidence” and link or note photos, videos, or screenshots of error messages. Brief phone notes—who you spoke with and when—can help corroborate your timeline.
Third, think beyond the dealership paperwork. Save tow receipts, roadside assistance confirmations, and emails or texts with the service advisor. Keep photos of warning lights, videos of the noise or hesitation, and notes about conditions that trigger the issue (speed, temperature, incline, battery level, etc.). If a defect strands you multiple times—say, a repeated 12V battery failure in an EV—those non-dealer records help fill gaps and show the real-world impact on safety and use.
Good repair tracking doesn’t require anything fancy—it’s about consistency. Capture each visit, keep your language precise, and preserve every document, photo, and receipt. That way, if you speak with a lawyer, you’ll have the key facts at your fingertips to discuss your warranty rights and potential next steps.
This article is for general informational purposes only, is not legal advice, and does not create an attorney–client relationship. Laws can change and your situation may be different; consult a lawyer for advice about your specific circumstances. If you believe your vehicle may qualify as a lemon, contact ZapLemon at (310) 489-3017 or https://zaplemon.com.