If any of these match what your vehicle is doing, you have a case worth reviewing.
Transmission problems show up in distinct patterns. Most are recoverable through warranty repair when the dealer takes them seriously. The ones we handle are the ones the dealer hasn't been able to fix after a reasonable opportunity.
Slipping
Engine RPMs climb without proportional acceleration. Vehicle "hunts" for gear under throttle. Often felt as a delayed response when merging or climbing grades.
Shuddering / Shaking
Vibration during gear changes, especially at light throttle, low speeds, or torque converter lock-up around 30-45 mph. Sometimes felt as a "judder."
Harsh or Delayed Shifts
Hard jerks during shifts. Delays between when you shift into Drive or Reverse and when the transmission actually engages. Sometimes a complete failure to engage.
Gear Hunting
Transmission rapidly switches between gears (often 6th-to-8th-to-6th on highway cruise), unable to settle on the correct ratio. Common on newer 8/9/10-speed automatics.
Warning Lights & Limp Mode
Check Engine, transmission temperature, or wrench icons. Vehicle enters reduced-power "limp mode" — capped speed and gear range — until restart.
Fluid Leaks & Overheating
Red or brown fluid on the driveway. Burning smell after extended drives. Transmission temperature warnings during towing or sustained highway speed.
When transmission defects become safety issues. Sudden loss of acceleration at highway speed, failure to engage drive or reverse in traffic, unexpected downshifts during merging, or stalling at low speeds aren't just inconvenient — they're dangerous. Safety-related defects strengthen lemon law claims significantly. If you've felt any of these in traffic, the manufacturer has notice and a heightened duty to fix.
What "reasonable opportunity to repair" actually means. The general rule, with one important caveat.
Most state lemon laws apply a three-strikes rule: three or more failed repair attempts for the same defect, or 15+ cumulative days out of service during the warranty period, gives the manufacturer "a reasonable opportunity to repair." The federal Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act has a more flexible standard — fewer attempts may be enough for severe defects.
Here's the caveat that matters for transmissions: software updates that don't fix the underlying hardware count as failed repair attempts in most jurisdictions. If your transmission shudder returned after a TCM reflash, that reflash WAS a repair attempt. Manufacturers sometimes try to argue software updates are "preventive maintenance" rather than repairs. Courts have generally disagreed.
None of this is legal advice — it's a general framework. The specific application depends on your state, your vehicle, and your repair record. Call us and we'll tell you exactly where your case sits.
Two laws, one objective: cash for you, not a return trip to the dealer.
Transmission defect cases live at the intersection of state lemon law and federal warranty law. Knowing when to lead with which is the difference between a settlement and a stall.
State lemon law
Provides the cleanest claim path during the warranty period. Covers most new motor vehicles within the first 12-24 months. Manufacturer's remedy options under state law are typically:
- Replacement vehicle
- Purchase-price refund minus reasonable use offset
Both require surrendering the vehicle. Many of our clients prefer not to.
Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act (federal)
This is where we get the leverage to negotiate cash. MMWA covers any vehicle under written warranty — no 24-month cap. And it shifts attorney fees to the manufacturer when we win, which changes the math for the manufacturer dramatically:
- Damages measured in money, not vehicle return
- Federal court venue available (faster docket for many cases)
- Manufacturer pays attorney fees if we prevail — your recovery isn't reduced
- Covers used vehicles too if a written warranty applied