Lemon Law Attorneys

DearLegal connects you with experienced lemon-law attorneys who know how to force the manufacturer to refund, replace, or buy back your defective vehicle. Engine failures, transmission problems, electrical defects, persistent recall issues, EV battery problems — we’ll match you with the right attorney near you. In nearly every state, the manufacturer pays your attorney’s fees when you win.

A new (and sometimes used) vehicle with a defect that substantially impairs its use, value, or safety, where the manufacturer has had a reasonable number of attempts to fix it. Most states define "reasonable" as 3–4 repair attempts for the same defect or 30 cumulative days out of service.
Some states cover used cars under their lemon law (New Jersey, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New York for used-car dealer purchases). Where state lemon law doesn’t reach, the federal Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act often does — particularly if a written warranty is still in effect.
Yes — most state lemon laws explicitly cover leased vehicles. The remedy for leases is typically a buyback (manufacturer takes the vehicle and reimburses payments and down payment) or a comparable replacement.
Depends on the state. Some require it (California Song-Beverly does not require manufacturer arbitration; New York and Florida have specific state arbitration boards). Outcomes in manufacturer-run arbitration are typically less favorable than litigation outcomes, but they’re faster.
Three primary remedies: (1) buyback — manufacturer refunds the purchase price minus a reasonable usage offset; (2) replacement — manufacturer provides a comparable new vehicle; (3) cash settlement — manufacturer pays cash and you keep the vehicle. Plus incidentals (registration, taxes, financing) and (in some states) civil penalties.
In most cases, nothing out of pocket. Nearly every state lemon law (and Magnuson-Moss) shifts attorney fees to the manufacturer when the consumer prevails. The attorney is paid by the manufacturer, not from your recovery — so you typically keep 100% of the refund or settlement.

Why Do You Need a Lemon Law Attorney?

Lemon-law statutes are written to protect consumers, but the manufacturers have lawyers who do this every day — and you don’t. They’ll dispute whether your defect "substantially impairs" the use, safety, or value of the vehicle. They’ll argue the repair attempts didn’t count because the dealership couldn’t replicate the problem. They’ll offer a goodwill credit toward your next vehicle to make you go away. The single biggest reason to hire a lemon-law attorney isn’t cost — most state lemon laws shift attorney fees to the manufacturer when you win — it’s that manufacturers settle represented cases at meaningfully higher levels than pro-se complaints. Many state statutes also stack with the federal Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act, doubling the procedural avenues.

When Do You Need a Lemon Law Attorney?

Our network includes lemon law attorneys who handle every kind of case, including:

Types of Lemon Law Cases

From the moment you connect with a lemon law attorney, they go to work protecting your case. The most common matters we handle:

Not documenting every repair visit (keep all invoices, even for "could not duplicate")
Doing repairs at non-dealer shops (most state lemon laws require authorized-dealer repairs)
Letting the warranty expire before filing the claim
Accepting a manufacturer offer without comparing it to the statutory remedy
Skipping the state-required arbitration program where it’s mandatory
Missing the state lemon-law filing deadline (typically 1–4 years)
Continuing to drive the vehicle without documenting usage (it affects the buyback offset)

Common Lemon Law Mistakes

Even a small misstep can hurt your case. Here’s what to avoid:

How Much Do Lemon Law Attorneys Cost?

$0

Out of pocket — state law shifts your attorney fees to the wrongdoer. You keep your full recovery.

Nearly every state lemon law (and the federal Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act) shifts attorney fees to the manufacturer when the consumer prevails. You typically pay nothing out of pocket — the attorney is paid by the manufacturer, and you keep 100% of the buyback or settlement. A small number of attorneys take cases on a partial contingency in addition to fee-shifting; ask upfront.

What Can Your Lemon Law Compensation Include?

Refund / Buyback
Manufacturer refunds the purchase price minus a reasonable usage offset (typically based on miles driven before the first repair). Includes sales tax, registration, financing charges, and other incidentals in most states.
Replacement Vehicle
Manufacturer provides a comparable new vehicle in place of the lemon. Practical for some consumers; often the manufacturer pushes refund because finding a "comparable" vehicle can be contested.
Cash Settlement (Cash and Keep)
Manufacturer pays cash and you keep the vehicle. Common when the defect is annoying but not safety-critical, or when the consumer prefers to retain the vehicle.
Civil Penalty
California Song-Beverly allows up to 2× actual damages for willful violations. Some other states have similar enhanced damages. Civil penalties are in addition to the buyback or refund.
Attorney Fees
Nearly every state lemon law (and Magnuson-Moss) shifts attorney fees to the manufacturer when the consumer prevails. Most consumers pay nothing out of pocket for representation.
Incidentals and Consequential Damages
Rental vehicle costs during repairs, towing, registration, taxes, financing charges, and (in some states) diminished value or aggravation/inconvenience damages.
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DearLegal is a legal referral service, not a law firm. We connect individuals with licensed attorneys who can evaluate their case. Nothing on this page constitutes legal advice. Results vary based on individual circumstances.