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New Hampshire · Lemon Law & MMWA

New Hampshire Lemon Law Lawyer. Cash settlements, not return trips.

Lemonaid Firm partners with locally-admitted counsel in New Hampshire to handle cases under N.H. Rev. Stat. § 357-D (New Hampshire Lemon Law), with Joshua E. Feygin, Esq. leading federal MMWA strategy and the local-counsel firm handling state procedural admission. You get both: Lemonaid Firm's federal expertise plus a New Hampshire-admitted attorney on the local docket. If your vehicle has been in the shop too many times for the same defect, your manufacturer may owe you a cash settlement under New Hampshire's lemon law AND/or the federal Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act. We file under whichever gives you the strongest leverage.

Read the New Hampshire lemon law guide →
Federal MMWA focusCash-settlement focusWe seek manufacturer-paid fees

New Hampshire Lemon Law — At a Glance

Statute
N.H. Rev. Stat. § 357-D (New Hampshire Lemon Law)
Presumption
3 repair attempts OR 30 days out of service in first 2 years
Federal court
D.N.H. federal court; 1st Circuit on appeal
Arbitration
New Hampshire Motor Vehicle Industry Board (state-run)

Three steps to a cash settlement in New Hampshire.

1

Take the case eligibility quiz

Walk through a few quick questions about your New Hampshire purchase, your repair history, and your warranty status. We check your facts against N.H. Rev. Stat. § 357-D (New Hampshire Lemon Law) and federal MMWA. Two minutes.

2

We demand the manufacturer pay

We file a formal demand citing both N.H. Rev. Stat. § 357-D (New Hampshire Lemon Law) and federal MMWA. Most demands resolve in 60–120 days. If the manufacturer ignores or lowballs, we file in D.N.H. federal court; 1st Circuit on appeal.

3

Cash in hand

You keep your vehicle. The manufacturer pays you cash for diminished value. We seek to have the manufacturer pay our attorney fees separately under federal warranty law — they don't come out of your settlement.

You keep the car. You keep the cash.

We don't push buybacks or replacements. We pursue cash settlements under N.H. Rev. Stat. § 357-D (New Hampshire Lemon Law) and federal MMWA. You stay in your vehicle. We get a check from the manufacturer. That's it.

New Hampshire lemon law FAQs

Real questions New Hampshire consumers ask. Plain English answers.

Does the New Hampshire lemon law cover used vehicles?+

N.H. Rev. Stat. § 357-D (New Hampshire Lemon Law) primarily covers new vehicles. The federal Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act (MMWA) frequently extends to used vehicles that came with any written warranty — manufacturer remaining warranty, certified pre-owned warranty, or a dealer's used-car warranty. We evaluate whether your case fits state law, federal MMWA, or both.

How many repair attempts does New Hampshire require?+

New Hampshire's statutory presumption: 3 repair attempts OR 30 days out of service in first 2 years. Federal MMWA does not set a fixed number — it requires a 'reasonable opportunity' for the manufacturer to repair, which is fact-specific.

Do I have to arbitrate before suing in New Hampshire?+

New Hampshire arbitration rules: New Hampshire Motor Vehicle Industry Board (state-run). Federal MMWA claims generally do NOT require manufacturer-sponsored arbitration as a prerequisite to suit.

Who pays my attorney fees in a New Hampshire lemon law case?+

Under federal MMWA, the manufacturer pays the consumer's reasonable attorney fees when the consumer prevails. N.H. Rev. Stat. § 357-D (New Hampshire Lemon Law) also typically allows fee recovery. Lemonaid Firm works on contingency — no fees out of your pocket.

Can Lemonaid Firm represent me directly in New Hampshire?+

Lemonaid Firm partners with locally-admitted counsel in New Hampshire to handle cases under N.H. Rev. Stat. § 357-D (New Hampshire Lemon Law), with Joshua E. Feygin, Esq. leading federal MMWA strategy and the local-counsel firm handling state procedural admission. You get both: Lemonaid Firm's federal expertise plus a New Hampshire-admitted attorney on the local docket.

Free case review

Find out if you have a New Hampshire case

A few quick questions on your purchase, repair history, and warranty status — then we tell you whether you have a New Hampshire lemon law or federal MMWA claim. No appointment, no office visit, no fax.

Find out if you have a case →

Or call us at 844-321-LEMON