The state-law gap on used vehicles
Most state lemon laws are built around new-vehicle protection. They have presumption windows tied to original delivery date (12–24 months) and original mileage (12,000–24,000 miles) — windows that close before most used vehicles even change hands.
The result: a consumer who buys a 2-year-old used car with the original warranty still active often has no state lemon-law remedy when something breaks. The state statute has effectively expired.
Federal MMWA fills that gap.
What MMWA covers
Magnuson-Moss applies to any consumer product sold with a written warranty. For vehicles, that means:
- Original manufacturer warranty balance. A used car still under the original 3-year / 36,000-mile bumper-to-bumper or 5-year / 60,000-mile powertrain warranty is covered.
- Certified pre-owned (CPO) warranty. The CPO warranty itself is a written warranty under MMWA. Coverage usually extends the original.
- Extended service contracts (when written as warranties). If the extended service contract is structured as a warranty (not a service-only contract), MMWA applies.
- Dealer-issued written warranties. Any independent dealer that sold you a written warranty (not "implied warranty," not "as is") is covered.
What MMWA doesn't cover
Important exclusions:
- "As is" sales with no written warranty. If the vehicle was sold "as is" with no written warranty of any kind, MMWA doesn't apply.
- Service-only contracts. If the only contract is a service contract that covers specific repairs (not a warranty of merchantability or against defects), MMWA generally doesn't apply.
- Commercial-use vehicles. MMWA applies to consumer products. Vehicles primarily used for commercial purposes may not qualify.
How to know if you have a written warranty
Check three places:
- The manufacturer's original warranty booklet. Usually in the glovebox or available online by VIN. The new-vehicle warranty stays with the vehicle when it's resold during the warranty period.
- The CPO certification document. If the dealer that sold you the vehicle called it "certified pre-owned," there's a CPO warranty.
- The bill of sale or purchase contract. Look for "warranty" language. "Implied warranty of merchantability" disclaimers are common — but if there's any AFFIRMATIVE written warranty, MMWA applies.
The case strategy for used-car claims
Used-car MMWA claims look slightly different from new-vehicle claims:
- The clock starts at YOUR delivery, not the original owner's. Your repair history with the vehicle is what matters.
- Previous owner's repair history can help. If the prior owner had documented repair attempts for the same defect, that strengthens the "manufacturer had a reasonable opportunity" argument. Carfax + manufacturer warranty records can pull this.
- The dealer's representations matter. If the used-car dealer represented the vehicle as defect-free but the manufacturer's warranty records show prior repair attempts, that's a Magnuson-Moss claim plus potentially a state consumer-protection claim.
Common used-car MMWA claim types
Patterns we see often:
- Hyundai/Kia Theta II engines. Engine failure on used Sonatas, Optimas, Santa Fes, Sportages. Often covered under extended warranty (Hyundai/Kia issued lifetime engine warranties to address the class actions).
- Ford 6.7L PowerStroke turbocharger and DEF-system failures. Used F-250/F-350 trucks with documented turbo or emissions failures.
- BMW N20 timing-chain failures. Used 3-Series, 5-Series, X3 with documented timing-chain stretch.
- Nissan CVT failures. Used Altimas, Sentras, Rogues with documented CVT failures. Often covered under Nissan's extended CVT warranty.
- Tesla Model S / Model X drive-unit failures. Used Tesla vehicles with documented drive-unit replacements.
For all of these, the manufacturer warranty extensions or settled class actions may apply — and federal MMWA gives leverage when the manufacturer is slow-walking the repair.
What about CarMax, Carvana, online used dealers?
CarMax includes a 30-day / 1,500-mile warranty (statutory). Carvana offers similar. These trigger MMWA coverage for the warranty period. If you bought a vehicle online and the defect surfaced inside the warranty window, MMWA likely applies — but the window is short, so move quickly.
The case quiz
Used-vehicle warranty cases are exactly the kind of case where the answer depends on the specifics: which warranty applies, what the repair history shows, and what the manufacturer's response has been. Take our case eligibility quiz at quiz.lemonaidfirm.com. We'll tell you straight whether your used-vehicle situation supports a federal MMWA claim.