Lemon Law and Used Cars With Incorrect Software Updates

Software glitches aren’t just annoying—they can strand you, disable safety systems, or quietly drain a battery overnight. If your used car keeps acting up after a dealership or over‑the‑air update, you may be wondering whether California’s Lemon Law can help. Below, ZapLemon explains how the law treats used vehicles and what to know when software updates are part of the problem.

California Lemon Law and Used Cars Explained

California’s Lemon Law (the Song‑Beverly Consumer Warranty Act) protects consumers when a vehicle has a defect that substantially impairs use, value, or safety and the manufacturer or its authorized repair facility can’t fix it within a reasonable number of attempts. While many people think it only applies to brand‑new cars, used vehicles can be covered too—especially when they’re still under the original manufacturer’s warranty or a dealer provides a written warranty. The key is the presence of warranty coverage at the time the defects appear and repair attempts occur.

Coverage for used cars often comes through one of three paths: the original new‑car warranty that transfers to subsequent owners, a Certified Pre‑Owned (CPO) warranty, or a dealer’s limited warranty or service contract. “As‑is” sales generally limit your lemon remedies, but other consumer protections may still apply depending on the facts. California also recognizes certain time‑and‑mileage presumptions for new vehicles, but a claim can exist even outside those windows if the warranty and defect circumstances support it.

If your used car is spending repeated days in the shop or you’re making multiple trips for the same problem, start building your record now. Keep every repair order and invoice, note dates the car is unavailable, and write down what the technician said. Verify what warranty applies and its expiration mileage/date. If a manufacturer or dealer bulletin (often called a TSB) or recall exists, ask the service advisor to reference it on your paperwork. Clear, organized records are often the difference between uncertainty and a strong claim review.

How Software Update Errors Affect Used Car Claims

Modern vehicles rely on software to run engines, batteries, transmissions, driver‑assist systems, infotainment, and more. An incorrect software update—whether installed at the dealership or delivered over the air—can create or worsen defects: hard starting, stalling, power loss, sudden battery drain, warning lights that won’t clear, malfunctioning ADAS features (like lane‑keep or adaptive cruise), broken backup cameras, locked‑out charging on EVs, or a “bricked” infotainment screen that disables climate controls. If these issues substantially impair use, value, or safety and aren’t fixed within a reasonable number of attempts under warranty, they can factor into a used‑car lemon claim.

Proving a software‑related defect looks a little different. Helpful evidence includes version numbers before/after the update, screenshots or photos of error messages, dates/times of the update, and whether the problem started immediately afterward. Ask the service department to list the exact software package or calibration ID they installed, any failed attempts or rollbacks, and any related TSBs. If the vehicle repeatedly needs reprogramming, can’t accept updates, or reverts to the same failure after a short time, make sure that pattern appears on each repair order.

Practical tips: don’t clear codes at home before a service visit—let the shop scan and document them. If your car won’t drive safely, request towing through the warranty so the downtime is recorded. Keep notes of symptoms (when they occur, weather/temperature, speed, charging state for EVs). If the dealer suggests “it’s normal,” ask them to road‑test with you and to document their findings. For over‑the‑air updates, capture any prompts, failed‑update screens, or release notes. None of this replaces legal advice, but it can help a professional assess whether your situation fits California Lemon Law requirements for used vehicles.

This article is for general informational purposes only, is not legal advice, and reading it does not create an attorney‑client relationship with ZapLemon. Attorney advertising. Results depend on the facts of each case, and past outcomes do not guarantee future results. If you believe your vehicle may qualify as a lemon—or you’re dealing with recurring problems after a software update—contact ZapLemon for a consultation at (844) 927-5366 or visit www.zaplemon.com. A consultation is necessary to receive legal advice tailored to your situation.

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