Common Volkswagen defects we see
Jetta, Passat, Atlas, Tiguan, Taos, Golf, and ID.4 defect cases. Here's the cluster of recurring issues that drive Volkswagen lemon law and MMWA claims.
- VW 2.0T (EA888) oil-consumption defect (major class action)
- Dieselgate aftermath issues on remaining TDI vehicles
- DSG dual-clutch transmission mechatronic failures
- Tiguan and Atlas timing-chain failures
- ID.4 EV software updates that disabled features post-OTA
VW's history of warranty disputes is one of the longest in the auto industry — the 2.0T oil-consumption class alone has touched hundreds of thousands of vehicles.
If the dealer says it's normal and it isn't, that's why we exist.
What to do when the Volkswagen dealer can't fix it
You've been to the dealer. Multiple times. They've reset codes, swapped parts, told you it's normal — and the problem keeps coming back. Here's what we actually do.
Step 1 — get every repair order in writing. The dealer is legally required to give you a written repair order for every warranty visit. Save them all. Even the "no problem found" ones — especially those.
Step 2 — escalate to the manufacturer, not the dealer. Under both state lemon laws and federal MMWA, the warrantor is the MANUFACTURER, not the dealer. The dealer is the manufacturer's authorized agent, but the manufacturer is who owes you the remedy.
Step 3 — call us before you accept any "goodwill" offer. Volkswagen manufacturer representatives sometimes offer goodwill repairs, extended warranties, or limited cash payments to make the issue go away. These offers are usually significantly less than what you'd recover under federal warranty law. Take the case eligibility quiz first — we'll tell you what the case is actually worth.
Cash-only settlements are our default. You keep the Volkswagen, pocket the cash. We seek to have the manufacturer pay our attorney fees under MMWA — never out of your settlement.
How the case actually works
Same process, regardless of make. The manufacturer changes — the playbook doesn't.
Take the quiz
A few quick questions on your purchase, repairs, and warranty. Tells you whether you likely have a case before you talk to anyone.
We review
Upload (or text us photos of) your purchase agreement, every repair order, and your warranty booklet.
We demand the manufacturer, not the dealer
Under MMWA and state lemon laws, the warrantor is the manufacturer (Ford Motor Co, Stellantis, Toyota Motor North America, etc.) — not the local dealership. We file against the manufacturer.
Cash settlement
You keep the vehicle, pocket cash for diminished value. We seek to have the manufacturer pay our attorney fees under federal warranty law — never out of your settlement.