Florida’s Lemon Law can be a powerful tool for consumers stuck with a defective vehicle—but it is also highly technical.
Many valid claims fail not because the vehicle wasn’t a lemon, but because the consumer didn’t follow the exact legal requirements.
If you’re dealing with a defective car in Florida, understanding these technical rules can make or break your case.
⚖️ What Florida Lemon Law Covers (At a Technical Level)
Florida Lemon Law applies to:
- New or demonstrator vehicles
- Purchased or leased in Florida
- Used primarily for personal, family, or household purposes
🚗 Covered Vehicles Include:
- Cars
- SUVs
- Light trucks
- Certain vans
❌ Not Covered:
- Used vehicles (unless still qualifying under specific conditions)
- Motorcycles
- RVs (in most cases, only the chassis may qualify)
🧠 The Core Legal Standard: “Nonconformity”
Florida doesn’t just use the word “defect.”
Instead, the statute requires a “nonconformity.”
📌 A Nonconformity Is:
A defect or condition that:
- Substantially impairs the vehicle’s:
- Use
- Value
- OR safety
- And is covered by the manufacturer’s warranty
👉 This is a critical distinction.
Not every issue qualifies—only those that rise to the level of substantial impairment.
⏱️ The Lemon Law Rights Period (Strict Timing Rule)
One of the most important—and most misunderstood—requirements:
👉 The “Lemon Law Rights Period” = First 24 Months
This period begins on:
- The date of delivery of the vehicle to the consumer
⚠️ Why This Matters:
- All qualifying repair attempts must occur within this 24-month window
- If you wait too long, you may lose your claim entirely
🔁 The “Reasonable Number of Repair Attempts” Requirement
Florida law requires that the manufacturer be given a reasonable opportunity to fix the problem.
There are two main ways to meet this requirement:
1. Three Repair Attempts Test
You qualify if:
- The same nonconformity has been subject to 3 repair attempts
- All within the Lemon Law Rights Period
- And the issue still exists
⚠️ Key Detail:
The defect must be:
- The same issue, not different unrelated problems
2. 15-Day Out-of-Service Test
Alternatively, you qualify if:
- The vehicle is out of service for 15 or more cumulative days
- Due to one or more nonconformities
- Within the Lemon Law Rights Period
🧠 Important:
- Days do not have to be consecutive
- The issue does not have to be the same defect
📬 The Mandatory Written Notice Requirement (Critical Step)
This is where many cases fail.
Before you can proceed, you must send a Motor Vehicle Defect Notification (MVDN).
📌 Requirements:
- Must be sent to the manufacturer, not just the dealer
- Must be sent by:
- Certified mail
- Return receipt requested
⚠️ Why This Matters:
If you skip this step:
👉 Your Lemon Law claim can be denied—even if the vehicle clearly qualifies.
🔧 The Final Repair Opportunity
Once the manufacturer receives your notice:
They have:
- 10 days to respond
- And provide instructions for a final repair attempt
Then:
- They get 1 last opportunity to fix the vehicle
- Typically within 10 days after you deliver the vehicle
🚨 Key Point:
You must:
- Follow their instructions
- Deliver the vehicle as directed
👉 Failing to cooperate can hurt your claim.
🏛️ The Arbitration Requirement
Florida requires consumers to go through arbitration before filing a lawsuit.
Step 1: Manufacturer’s Arbitration Program
If the manufacturer has a state-certified program:
- You must go through it first
Step 2: Florida New Motor Vehicle Arbitration Board
If:
- The manufacturer has no program, OR
- You are not satisfied with the result
👉 You can file with the Florida Lemon Law Arbitration Board
📋 Filing with the Florida Arbitration Board
To file, you must:
- Submit a completed application
- Include supporting documentation:
- Repair orders
- Purchase/lease agreement
- Correspondence
⏳ Timing:
- Must file within 60 days after the Lemon Law Rights Period ends
👉 Missing this deadline can eliminate your claim.
⚖️ What Happens at the Arbitration Hearing?
The hearing is:
- Formal, but not as strict as court
- Conducted before a panel
You will need to show:
- The defect exists
- Repair attempts meet statutory requirements
- You followed all procedural steps
The Manufacturer Will:
- Present defenses
- Argue the defect is not substantial
- Claim the issue was fixed or caused by misuse
💰 Remedies Available Under Florida Lemon Law
If you win, you are entitled to:
🔹 Replacement Vehicle
A comparable new vehicle
🔹 Refund (Buyback)
Including:
- Purchase price
- Sales tax
- Registration fees
- Incidental costs
➖ Minus:
A reasonable offset for use, based on mileage
⚠️ Common Technical Pitfalls That Kill Claims
Even strong cases fail due to procedural errors.
❌ Missing the 24-Month Window
All qualifying activity must occur within this period.
❌ Not Sending Proper Written Notice
Failing to send certified notice to the manufacturer is one of the biggest mistakes.
❌ Not Tracking Repair Attempts Properly
Each repair visit must be documented.
❌ Confusing Multiple Issues
The “3 attempts” rule requires the same defect.
❌ Missing Arbitration Deadlines
The 60-day filing window is strict.
🧠 Important Legal Nuances
🔹 “Substantial Impairment” Is Subjective
What qualifies can depend on:
- Safety concerns
- Frequency of breakdowns
- Impact on usability
🔹 Dealers vs. Manufacturers
- Dealers perform repairs
- Manufacturers are legally responsible
👉 Your claim is against the manufacturer, not the dealership.
🔹 Used Vehicles
Florida Lemon Law generally does not apply to used vehicles—but:
- Other warranty laws (like implied warranty or Magnuson-Moss) may still apply
💡 Strategic Insight Most Consumers Miss
Many consumers:
- Wait too long
- Assume repeated repairs are enough
- Never send the required notice
👉 The result: a valid lemon case that fails on a technicality.
🛡️ Do You Need a Lawyer for Florida Lemon Law?
You are not required to have one—but the process is highly procedural.
An attorney can help:
- Ensure all deadlines are met
- Properly frame the defect as a “nonconformity”
- Navigate arbitration
- Maximize recovery
📉 The Bottom Line
Florida Lemon Law is powerful—but unforgiving.
To win your case, you must:
- Act within strict timelines
- Document every repair
- Send proper legal notice
- Follow the arbitration process
Even one missed step can cost you your claim.
📞 Dealing with a Defective Vehicle in Florida?
If your car keeps going back to the shop and the problem isn’t fixed, you may qualify for a refund or replacement—but timing and procedure are critical.


