lemon law how does it work?

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how those a lemon law functions is it brand new cars from a emporium or it can be aged cars

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Comments (3)

the actual lemon law reads that the dealer splits labor 50-50 and the parts 50-50 with the purchaser on USED cars
however the dealer depending on the value of the car will most of the time buy the car back

it takes as trooper3 said the car to go into the shop for the same thing 3 times to be considered a lemon

there is a time limit and a mileage limit from the time of purchase but I’m not sure what these are.

on new cars the warranty normally covers all repairs for at least thirty thousand miles at the least anyway at no cost to the owner however the lemon law still kicks if it has the same problem three times. also if the car has to have like ten or fifteen repairs of any nature within the first year. on NEW cars

any car you buy from any dealer under 120,000 miles must be guarenteed to run for 90 days – anything that gets messed up, dealer must fix for free

The lemon law staes if a car goes for service, for the same problem three times, without getting fixed, the dealer has to buy the car back.

I have never heard of a 90 day guarantee on a used car with 120K, not sure where that came from.

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