Dodge Lemon Law in California
Transmission, engine, and Uconnect electrical defects on Charger, Challenger, Durango, and Hornet models can support a Song-Beverly Act claim.
California drivers who own or lease a Dodge (including the Charger, Challenger, Durango, and Hornet) often come to us after the same warranty problem has already sent them back to the dealer more than once. Under the Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act — California's lemon law — a pattern of failed repairs for a substantial defect can support a claim for a buyback, replacement, or settlement while the manufacturer's warranty is still in effect.
This guide explains how lemon law issues commonly arise for Dodge vehicles with transmission, engine, or electrical problems, what paperwork matters, and when it makes sense to talk with a California lemon law attorney. It is educational information, not a substitute for reviewing your repair orders.
When a Dodge May Qualify as a Lemon
There is no single statewide "three strikes" checklist that applies to every Dodge claim. Fact-finders look at whether a defect substantially impairs the vehicle's use, value, or safety and whether the manufacturer (through its authorized dealers) had a reasonable opportunity to fix it. Patterns that often matter include:
- The same or related defect returns after multiple warranty repair visits
- The vehicle spends a long stretch of days out of service for warranty work
- A safety-related problem (steering, brakes, unexpected stalling) that dealers cannot resolve
- Problems that began while the original manufacturer's warranty was still active — typically newer model years
Common Dodge Defect Patterns
Complaint and repair histories for Dodge vehicles frequently involve issues such as:
- Transmission shudder, hard shifting, or failure
- Engine stalling, misfires, or oil-consumption problems
- Uconnect and electrical system failures
- Brake and drivetrain defects
A single maintenance visit is ordinary. A repeating warranty defect that the dealer cannot permanently correct is different — and that paper trail is what a Song-Beverly evaluation focuses on.
Documents Worth Keeping
- Every repair order (with dates in / dates out and the customer's complaint language)
- Purchase or lease agreement and warranty booklet
- Notes of calls or emails with the dealer or manufacturer
- Rental, towing, or registration receipts tied to the defect when available
Do not rely on the dealer to "keep it on file." Ask for a copy of each repair order when you pick up the vehicle.
How a California Claim Typically Moves Forward
- Case review — An attorney reviews warranty status and the repair history at no cost for a potential claim.
- Manufacturer engagement — Counsel handles notice and negotiations with Dodge and its dealer network.
- Remedy — Buyback, replacement, or settlement when the facts support it; when a consumer prevails, the manufacturer typically pays reasonable attorney fees under Song-Beverly.
Why Timing Matters
Lemon law leverage is strongest while the manufacturer's warranty still covers the defect. If your Dodge is a recent model year and the same problem started early, documenting each visit now is usually better than waiting until coverage is gone.
Free Dodge Case Review
Call (818) 945-0900 or contact us online. We will tell you honestly whether your repair history supports a California lemon law claim.
For the statewide overview — who qualifies, buybacks vs replacements, and fee-shifting — read our California Lemon Law Guide. More vehicle guides are listed on the Resources page.
Disclaimer: This page is general information about California lemon law topics, not legal advice. Whether your Dodge qualifies depends on your warranty, repair history, and specific facts.
For representation, visit our California Lemon Law practice area.
Think You Have a Lemon? Get a Free Review.
Speak directly with an attorney about your vehicle. Under California's Lemon Law, the manufacturer typically pays your attorney's fees when you win.
Call (818) 945-0900 Request a Consultation