Does the Lemon Law cover vehicles that were purchased “As-Is” with no warranty from a dealership?

Tags:, , , ,

5

If someone purchased a automobile from a dealership meaningful which a automobile did not come with a guaranty as well as a automobile pennyless down 350 miles divided from home since of a inadequate fuel siphon a day after it was purchased, is a dealership obliged for a car underneath a Lemon Law?

Related solution post:

  1. Nevada lemon law? Does it cover vehicles bought without warranty?
  2. if i purchased a used car with a 30 day warranty and on it says im covered 50% does the lemon law apply?
  3. Does the Lemon law Apply to an AS-IS Warranty?
  4. What is a NEW car? Lemon Law warranty?
  5. Missouri Lemon Law? Purchased a week ago. Can my friend take the car back or is she stuck with it?

Comments (5)

Unfortunately, there’s no gray area in the phrase "As Is"
You throw your self on the mercy of the dealership, but they are in no way obligated to repair it at their expense.

i would suspect the dealership would cover that up to 90 days but that is not a lemon law thing that applies to new cars that have been brought in to a dealer to be repaired for the same thing more than 3 times.

No, that’s why it was sold "as is".I know that trade ins are gone over for major problems before they are put on the lot. The others are sent to auction.

No.

Lemon laws cover BRAND NEW cars that the shop has been unable to fix in 4 TRYS.

As-is means as-is. 1/10 of a mile down the road. Doesn’t matter.

You don’t send the dealer extra money if the car lasts longer than you expect do you ?

How in the world can a dealer "hide" a faulty fuel pump ?

THEY CANT !

It just broke and its all your responsibility.

You could have spent $100 on a mechanic and the fuel pump can still go out 350 miles later. Its USED,not new.

Nope. Not a chance.
—————————–

My Car is a Lemon

A Lemon Car is a legal definition – not an opinion

Generally, if a NEW car has been repaired 4 or more times for the same Defect within the Warranty Period and the Defect has not been fixed, the car qualifies as a Lemon. A vehicle that continues to have a defect that substantially impairs its use, value, or safety could be classified as a lemon. All States differ so you should consult the Lemon Law for your particular State. Note that the warranty period may or may not coincide with the Manufacturer’s Warranty. Generally lemon laws ONLY apply to the first owner, but they may continue to apply as long as the car is under the original new car warranty period.

Post a comment