I. Introduction
Buying a brand-new motor vehicle is a major financial commitment. A buyer reasonably expects that a new car will be safe, roadworthy, and free from serious defects. When a newly purchased vehicle repeatedly fails despite repair attempts, the buyer may have remedies under the Philippine Lemon Law.
The Philippine Lemon Law is formally known as Republic Act No. 10642, or the “Philippine Lemon Law.” It protects consumers who purchase brand-new motor vehicles that turn out to have defects or conditions that substantially impair their use, value, or safety. The law gives the consumer a structured process for repair, replacement, refund, or other remedies, while also giving the manufacturer, distributor, authorized dealer, or retailer a fair opportunity to fix the defect.
This article explains the scope of the Philippine Lemon Law, who may claim under it, what vehicles are covered, what defects qualify, the step-by-step procedure for asserting rights, the remedies available, and practical considerations for consumers.
II. Purpose of the Philippine Lemon Law
The Philippine Lemon Law was enacted to protect buyers of brand-new motor vehicles from being stuck with defective cars that cannot be repaired after a reasonable number of attempts. It recognizes that a consumer who buys a new vehicle should not bear the burden of repeated breakdowns, recurring defects, or safety-related problems that substantially impair the vehicle.
At the same time, the law balances consumer protection with the interests of manufacturers and sellers. It does not automatically entitle every dissatisfied car owner to a refund or replacement. The defect must fall within the law, the consumer must follow the required process, and the seller or manufacturer must be given the opportunity to repair the vehicle.
III. What Vehicles Are Covered
The Philippine Lemon Law applies to brand-new motor vehicles purchased in the Philippines.
In general, the law covers newly purchased motor vehicles that are intended for personal, family, household, or business use, subject to the statutory definitions and exclusions. The law is concerned with vehicles that are defective from the standpoint of quality, performance, safety, or reliability despite being sold as brand new.
The law does not generally apply to second-hand, pre-owned, repossessed, refurbished, or used vehicles. A buyer of a used car may still have other remedies under the Civil Code, consumer protection laws, warranty agreements, or the terms of the sale, but those remedies are separate from the Philippine Lemon Law.
IV. Who May Claim Under the Lemon Law
The primary claimant is the consumer who purchased the brand-new motor vehicle. The buyer may invoke the law when the vehicle develops a qualifying defect within the legal protection period and the defect remains unresolved after repeated repair attempts.
The law is especially relevant to buyers who experience any of the following:
- Repeated engine problems;
- Transmission defects;
- Brake or steering defects;
- Electrical system failures;
- Air-conditioning defects that recur despite repair;
- Safety system malfunctions;
- Persistent warning lights;
- Recurrent stalling;
- Water leaks or structural defects;
- Other serious defects affecting use, value, or safety.
Not every inconvenience qualifies. Minor issues, cosmetic complaints, ordinary wear and tear, damage caused by misuse, or defects caused by unauthorized modification may fall outside the protection of the law.
V. The Lemon Law Rights Period
The law provides a specific period during which the consumer may invoke Lemon Law rights. This is commonly referred to as the “Lemon Law rights period.”
The rights period is one year from the date of original delivery of the brand-new motor vehicle to the consumer, or the first 20,000 kilometers of operation after delivery, whichever comes first.
This means that the consumer must pay close attention to both time and mileage. A vehicle may still be relatively new, but if it has already exceeded the mileage threshold, the Lemon Law rights period may no longer apply. Conversely, a vehicle may have low mileage, but if more than one year has passed from delivery, the statutory Lemon Law rights period may have expired.
The date of delivery is important. It should be established through official documents such as the sales invoice, delivery receipt, registration documents, warranty booklet, and dealer release papers.
VI. What Defects Qualify
A defect may qualify under the Philippine Lemon Law if it substantially impairs the use, value, or safety of the brand-new motor vehicle.
This standard is important. The defect must be more than trivial. It must be serious enough to affect the vehicle’s normal operation, market value, reliability, or safety. For example, a recurring brake failure is clearly more serious than a minor interior rattle. A persistent engine defect that causes the car to stall may substantially impair use and safety. A recurring transmission defect may substantially impair both value and usability.
The defect must also arise within the Lemon Law rights period and must not be attributable to the consumer’s abuse, neglect, unauthorized modification, accident, or failure to follow proper maintenance requirements.
VII. Reasonable Number of Repair Attempts
The Lemon Law does not usually permit the consumer to immediately demand a replacement or refund after the first defect appears. The manufacturer, distributor, authorized dealer, or retailer must be given a reasonable opportunity to repair the vehicle.
A central concept under the law is the “reasonable number of attempts” to repair the same complaint. The law generally contemplates that if the same defect remains unresolved after at least four separate repair attempts, the consumer may invoke the remedies under the Lemon Law.
The repair attempts should concern the same defect or complaint. For example, if the vehicle repeatedly stalls and the dealer attempts to repair the stalling issue four times without success, the consumer may have a stronger Lemon Law claim. But if the vehicle had four unrelated minor complaints, the case may be more difficult.
Documentation is critical. The consumer should preserve every job order, repair invoice, service report, diagnostic report, warranty claim record, and communication with the dealer.
VIII. Notice to the Manufacturer, Distributor, Authorized Dealer, or Retailer
A consumer seeking to invoke Lemon Law rights should notify the manufacturer, distributor, authorized dealer, or retailer of the defect and the repair history. The notice should be in writing.
The written notice should include:
- The buyer’s name and contact information;
- The vehicle’s make, model, year, plate number if available, conduction sticker, vehicle identification number, and engine number;
- The date of delivery or purchase;
- The current odometer reading;
- A clear description of the defect;
- A chronology of repair attempts;
- Copies of job orders and service records;
- A statement that the consumer is invoking rights under Republic Act No. 10642;
- The remedy requested, such as final repair, replacement, refund, or other lawful relief.
The consumer should send the notice through a verifiable method, such as personal delivery with receiving copy, registered mail, courier, or email to an official address if recognized by the dealer or manufacturer. Proof of receipt should be preserved.
IX. The Mandatory Repair Process
The law allows the manufacturer, distributor, authorized dealer, or retailer to repair the vehicle within the prescribed process. During this period, the vehicle may be brought to the authorized service center for inspection, diagnosis, and repair.
The consumer should cooperate with reasonable inspection and repair procedures. Refusing to bring the vehicle in for repair, failing to make the vehicle available, or having unauthorized persons tamper with the vehicle may weaken the claim.
The dealer or manufacturer should provide documentation for each repair attempt. The consumer should insist on a written job order before the vehicle is left for repair and a written service report upon release. Vague verbal assurances should not replace proper documentation.
X. Transportation Allowance
One important feature of the Philippine Lemon Law is the consumer’s entitlement to a reasonable daily transportation allowance while the vehicle is undergoing repair during the Lemon Law process, subject to the law’s conditions.
This allowance recognizes that the buyer of a brand-new vehicle may suffer inconvenience and transportation costs when the vehicle is repeatedly unavailable due to defects. The amount and entitlement may depend on the circumstances and applicable implementing rules.
The consumer should request the allowance in writing and keep proof of expenses such as taxi receipts, ride-hailing receipts, car rental invoices, or other transportation records.
XI. When the Vehicle May Be Considered a Lemon
A vehicle may be considered a “lemon” when it has a defect or condition that substantially impairs its use, value, or safety, and the defect continues to exist despite the required number of repair attempts within the Lemon Law rights period.
The phrase “lemon” does not mean that every defective car automatically qualifies. The defect must be legally significant, properly documented, raised within the rights period, and unresolved after the legally recognized repair opportunities.
In practical terms, a strong Lemon Law claim usually has the following features:
- The vehicle was brand new when purchased;
- The defect appeared within one year from delivery or within 20,000 kilometers, whichever came first;
- The defect is serious and recurring;
- The same defect was brought for repair several times;
- The defect substantially affects use, value, or safety;
- The consumer retained complete service records;
- The consumer gave written notice;
- The vehicle was not misused, modified, or damaged by the consumer.
XII. Remedies Available to the Consumer
If the vehicle qualifies under the Philippine Lemon Law and the defect remains unresolved, the consumer may be entitled to legal remedies. These may include replacement of the vehicle, refund of the purchase price, or other relief allowed by law and determined through the proper process.
A. Replacement
Replacement means that the defective vehicle may be substituted with a comparable brand-new motor vehicle. The replacement should be of similar value and specifications, subject to the law, implementing rules, and the circumstances of the case.
B. Refund
Refund means the return of the purchase price paid by the consumer, subject to lawful deductions or adjustments where applicable. The precise amount may depend on the law, implementing rules, usage, financing arrangements, taxes, registration costs, insurance, and other transaction details.
C. Other Remedies
Other remedies may include repair, reimbursement, damages, or other relief depending on the applicable law and the findings of the proper authority. The Lemon Law does not necessarily prevent a consumer from invoking other legal rights under the Civil Code, Consumer Act, warranty law, contract law, or other applicable statutes, where appropriate.
XIII. Role of the Department of Trade and Industry
The Department of Trade and Industry, commonly known as the DTI, plays a significant role in Lemon Law claims. The DTI is the government agency generally associated with consumer complaints involving defective products, including claims under the Philippine Lemon Law.
A consumer who cannot resolve the matter directly with the dealer, distributor, or manufacturer may file a complaint with the DTI. The DTI process may involve mediation, adjudication, submission of evidence, technical evaluation, and determination of appropriate relief.
The complaint should be supported by documents. A consumer should prepare a complete file before filing with the DTI.
XIV. Documents Needed for a Lemon Law Claim
A consumer should gather and preserve the following documents:
- Sales invoice;
- Official receipt;
- Deed of sale, sales contract, or purchase agreement;
- Vehicle delivery receipt;
- Certificate of registration and official receipt from the Land Transportation Office, if already available;
- Warranty booklet;
- Owner’s manual;
- Preventive maintenance records;
- Job orders;
- Repair invoices;
- Diagnostic reports;
- Service center findings;
- Written communications with the dealer;
- Emails, text messages, and chat records;
- Photos and videos showing the defect;
- Towing receipts, if any;
- Transportation expense receipts;
- Insurance documents;
- Financing documents, if the vehicle was purchased through a loan;
- A written timeline of all incidents and repair attempts.
The written timeline is especially useful. It should state the date, mileage, defect experienced, action taken, service center visited, repair performed, and whether the defect returned.
XV. Practical Step-by-Step Guide to Claiming Lemon Law Rights
Step 1: Confirm That the Vehicle Is Covered
The consumer must first confirm that the car is brand new and that the defect occurred within one year from delivery or within the first 20,000 kilometers, whichever came first.
Step 2: Identify the Defect Clearly
The defect should be described specifically. Instead of saying “the car is defective,” the consumer should state the actual problem, such as “engine stalls while idling,” “transmission jerks when shifting from first to second gear,” or “brake warning light repeatedly appears despite repair.”
Step 3: Bring the Vehicle to an Authorized Service Center
The vehicle should be brought to the authorized dealer or service center. Repairs done by unauthorized shops may create disputes about causation and warranty coverage.
Step 4: Demand Written Job Orders and Service Reports
Every visit should be documented. The consumer should not rely on verbal explanations. Each job order should reflect the actual complaint, not a vague or watered-down description.
Step 5: Track Repeated Repair Attempts
The consumer should count how many times the same defect has been brought in for repair. Repeated repair attempts for the same unresolved defect are central to a Lemon Law claim.
Step 6: Send a Formal Written Notice
After repeated unsuccessful repair attempts, the consumer should send a written notice invoking the Philippine Lemon Law. The notice should be addressed to the dealer, distributor, manufacturer, or retailer, as appropriate.
Step 7: Allow the Required Repair Opportunity
The law gives the responsible party an opportunity to address the complaint. The consumer should comply with reasonable requests to inspect and repair the vehicle.
Step 8: Request Transportation Allowance Where Applicable
If the vehicle is unavailable due to the repair process covered by the law, the consumer should request the transportation allowance and keep records of transportation expenses.
Step 9: File a Complaint With the DTI if the Matter Is Not Resolved
If the dealer or manufacturer refuses relief, denies liability, or fails to resolve the defect, the consumer may file a complaint with the DTI.
Step 10: Present Evidence Clearly
The consumer should organize evidence by date and issue. A clear chronology is often more persuasive than emotional statements. The focus should be on the defect, the repair history, the effect on use, value, or safety, and the failure to resolve the problem.
XVI. Draft Demand Letter Structure
A Lemon Law demand letter may follow this structure:
- Heading and date;
- Name and address of dealer, distributor, or manufacturer;
- Subject line stating invocation of rights under Republic Act No. 10642;
- Identification of the vehicle;
- Date of purchase and delivery;
- Statement of mileage;
- Description of defect;
- Chronology of repair attempts;
- Statement that the defect substantially impairs use, value, or safety;
- Demand for appropriate remedy;
- Request for written response within a reasonable period;
- Reservation of rights;
- Signature and attachments.
The tone should be firm, factual, and professional.
XVII. Sample Demand Letter
Date: [Insert Date]
To: [Dealer / Distributor / Manufacturer]
Address: [Insert Address]
Subject: Notice and Demand Under Republic Act No. 10642, the Philippine Lemon Law
Dear Sir/Madam:
I am the purchaser of a brand-new [make, model, variant, year] with Vehicle Identification Number [VIN], Engine Number [engine number], and Conduction Sticker or Plate Number [number]. The vehicle was delivered to me on [date of delivery] and currently has an odometer reading of approximately [mileage] kilometers.
Within the Lemon Law rights period, the vehicle developed the following defect: [describe defect clearly]. This defect substantially impairs the use, value, and/or safety of the vehicle because [explain effect].
I brought the vehicle to your authorized service center for the same complaint on the following dates:
- [Date] — [Mileage] — [Complaint / job order number / action taken]
- [Date] — [Mileage] — [Complaint / job order number / action taken]
- [Date] — [Mileage] — [Complaint / job order number / action taken]
- [Date] — [Mileage] — [Complaint / job order number / action taken]
Despite these repair attempts, the defect continues to recur.
Accordingly, I am formally invoking my rights under Republic Act No. 10642, otherwise known as the Philippine Lemon Law. I request that you provide the appropriate remedy under the law, including replacement, refund, or such other relief as may be warranted by the facts and applicable law.
I also request written confirmation of your proposed action within a reasonable period from receipt of this letter. I reserve all rights and remedies available under the Philippine Lemon Law, the Consumer Act, the Civil Code, warranty law, and other applicable laws.
Attached are copies of relevant documents, including the sales invoice, delivery receipt, warranty records, job orders, service reports, and other supporting evidence.
Very truly yours,
[Name]
[Address]
[Contact Information]
XVIII. Common Dealer Defenses and How Consumers Should Respond
A. “The Defect Is Normal”
Dealers may sometimes claim that a defect is normal for the model. The consumer should ask for this statement in writing. If the defect affects safety, performance, reliability, or value, the consumer may still challenge the claim.
B. “No Defect Was Found”
A “no defect found” finding does not automatically defeat the claim. Intermittent defects are common in vehicles. The consumer should document the defect through videos, photos, dashboard warnings, third-party observations, towing records, and repeated incident reports.
C. “The Vehicle Was Misused”
The dealer may argue that the defect was caused by misuse, neglect, unauthorized repair, poor maintenance, accident, flooding, overloading, racing, or modification. The consumer should preserve maintenance records and avoid unauthorized work while the claim is pending.
D. “The Warranty Is the Only Remedy”
Warranty rights and Lemon Law rights are related but not identical. A warranty may provide repair coverage, but the Lemon Law may provide additional statutory remedies if the defect remains unresolved after repeated repair attempts.
E. “The Complaint Was Filed Too Late”
The consumer must prove that the defect occurred and was reported within the Lemon Law rights period. This is why early documentation is essential.
XIX. Relationship Between the Lemon Law and Warranty Rights
The Lemon Law does not replace the manufacturer’s warranty. Instead, it provides a legal remedy when warranty repairs fail to resolve a serious recurring defect within the statutory period.
A consumer should continue to comply with warranty requirements, including preventive maintenance schedules, use of authorized service centers, and proper vehicle care. Noncompliance may give the dealer or manufacturer a basis to dispute the claim.
The warranty booklet should be reviewed carefully. It may contain procedures for reporting defects, exclusions, maintenance obligations, and contact details for escalation.
XX. Relationship With the Civil Code and Consumer Protection Laws
Aside from the Philippine Lemon Law, a consumer may have rights under the Civil Code provisions on obligations and contracts, warranties, hidden defects, and damages. The Consumer Act of the Philippines may also be relevant where there are unfair or deceptive sales practices, defective products, or violations of consumer rights.
Depending on the facts, a consumer may consider claims based on breach of warranty, rescission, reduction of price, damages, misrepresentation, or violation of consumer protection laws. The availability of these remedies depends on the evidence and the applicable legal theory.
XXI. Vehicles Purchased Through Financing
Many brand-new vehicles are purchased through bank financing or in-house financing. A Lemon Law claim may become more complicated when a financing institution is involved.
The consumer should distinguish between two relationships:
- The sales and warranty relationship with the dealer, distributor, manufacturer, or retailer; and
- The loan or financing relationship with the bank or financing company.
Even if the vehicle is defective, the buyer may still have obligations under the financing agreement unless legally modified, suspended, or resolved through proper channels. The consumer should not simply stop paying the loan without understanding the legal consequences. Nonpayment may lead to penalties, negative credit consequences, repossession, or litigation.
Where refund or replacement is sought, the financing documents should be reviewed to determine how payments, chattel mortgage obligations, insurance, and registration costs will be handled.
XXII. Insurance, Registration, and Incidental Costs
A Lemon Law dispute may involve additional expenses beyond the vehicle’s purchase price. These may include:
- Comprehensive insurance;
- Compulsory third-party liability insurance;
- LTO registration fees;
- chattel mortgage fees;
- bank charges;
- towing costs;
- car rental or transportation costs;
- accessories installed by the dealer;
- extended warranty charges;
- preventive maintenance costs.
Whether these amounts are recoverable depends on the applicable law, the remedy granted, the proof submitted, and the decision of the proper authority.
XXIII. Importance of Evidence
The success of a Lemon Law claim often depends on evidence. Consumers should avoid vague complaints and emotional arguments. The strongest claims are supported by records.
Useful evidence includes:
- Videos showing the defect;
- Photos of warning lights or defective parts;
- Job orders describing the same recurring complaint;
- Written service findings;
- Expert or technical evaluations;
- Towing records;
- Roadside assistance reports;
- Messages from service advisors;
- Emails acknowledging the problem;
- Proof that the defect occurred within the rights period.
When taking videos, the consumer should capture the date, mileage, dashboard indicators, sound, driving condition, and circumstances of the defect where safely possible.
XXIV. What Consumers Should Avoid
A consumer pursuing a Lemon Law claim should avoid the following:
- Continuing to drive an unsafe vehicle;
- Ignoring dashboard warning lights;
- Allowing unauthorized repairs;
- Modifying the vehicle while the claim is pending;
- Missing preventive maintenance schedules;
- Failing to get written job orders;
- Accepting vague verbal promises;
- Losing receipts and service documents;
- Exaggerating facts;
- Posting defamatory accusations online.
Public complaints on social media may pressure a dealer, but they may also create risks if statements are inaccurate, malicious, or unsupported. A consumer should focus on documented facts.
XXV. What Dealers and Manufacturers Are Expected to Do
Dealers, distributors, manufacturers, and retailers should act in good faith when handling Lemon Law complaints. They should receive the complaint, inspect the vehicle, provide proper documentation, attempt repairs, communicate findings, and comply with remedies when legally warranted.
They should not dismiss serious recurring complaints without investigation. They should also avoid misdescribing the consumer’s complaint in job orders, delaying repairs without reason, or refusing to provide service documentation.
XXVI. Technical Evaluation
In some disputes, technical evaluation may be necessary. A defect may require diagnostic testing, road testing, scan-tool results, parts inspection, or expert assessment.
The consumer should request copies of diagnostic findings where available. If the dealer refuses to provide technical records, the consumer should document the refusal.
Technical evaluation is especially important for intermittent defects, such as random stalling, sudden loss of power, electrical failures, warning lights, or transmission jerking.
XXVII. Burden of Proof
A Lemon Law claim requires proof. The consumer must be able to show that the vehicle is covered, the defect occurred within the rights period, the defect substantially impairs use, value, or safety, the responsible party was given the required repair opportunities, and the defect remains unresolved.
The dealer or manufacturer may present contrary evidence, such as findings that the vehicle has no defect, that the issue was repaired, that the complaint was caused by misuse, or that the claim falls outside the Lemon Law period.
The decision-maker will evaluate the documents, testimony, repair records, technical findings, and applicable law.
XXVIII. DTI Complaint Process in Practical Terms
A consumer filing with the DTI should prepare a written complaint and attach supporting documents. The complaint should state the facts clearly and request a specific remedy.
The process may involve:
- Filing of complaint;
- Submission of documents;
- Mediation or conciliation;
- Response from the dealer or manufacturer;
- Technical evaluation where necessary;
- Hearing or adjudication if settlement fails;
- Decision or order;
- Compliance or further remedies.
The consumer should attend scheduled conferences and bring organized records. Missing hearings or failing to submit documents may weaken the case.
XXIX. Possible Outcomes
A Lemon Law claim may result in several possible outcomes:
- The vehicle is successfully repaired;
- The dealer agrees to replace defective parts;
- The dealer provides goodwill compensation;
- The dealer agrees to replacement;
- The dealer agrees to refund;
- The DTI orders relief;
- The complaint is dismissed for lack of evidence;
- The matter is elevated to court or another forum.
Not every claim results in refund or replacement. The outcome depends on the facts, proof, seriousness of the defect, repair history, and compliance with the law.
XXX. Frequently Asked Questions
1. Does the Lemon Law apply to used cars?
Generally, the Philippine Lemon Law applies to brand-new motor vehicles. Used-car buyers may have other remedies, but not necessarily under the Lemon Law.
2. Does one defect automatically make a car a lemon?
No. The law generally requires a serious defect and a reasonable number of repair attempts. The responsible party must be given a chance to repair the vehicle.
3. What is the rights period?
The rights period is one year from original delivery or the first 20,000 kilometers of operation, whichever comes first.
4. What if the defect appears after one year?
A defect appearing after the Lemon Law rights period may not be covered by the Lemon Law, but warranty rights or other legal remedies may still apply.
5. Can I demand a brand-new replacement immediately?
Not usually. The law requires compliance with the repair and claim process. Replacement becomes a possible remedy when the legal requirements are met.
6. Should I continue preventive maintenance?
Yes. The consumer should comply with maintenance schedules and warranty requirements to avoid giving the dealer a defense.
7. Can I have the vehicle repaired by an independent mechanic?
Doing so may create warranty and causation issues. During the Lemon Law rights period and while a claim is being pursued, repairs should generally be handled by authorized service centers unless there is a compelling reason otherwise.
8. What if the dealer refuses to issue a job order?
The consumer should document the refusal in writing and send an email or letter summarizing the visit, complaint, and refusal. This may later support the consumer’s case.
9. Can I claim transportation expenses?
The law recognizes a transportation allowance under certain circumstances while the vehicle is under repair within the Lemon Law process. The consumer should request it and keep receipts.
10. Can I sue separately?
Depending on the facts, other remedies may be available under the Civil Code, Consumer Act, warranty law, or contract law. Court action should be evaluated carefully because it may involve cost, time, and procedural requirements.
XXXI. Checklist for Consumers
Before filing a Lemon Law claim, the consumer should check the following:
- Was the vehicle brand new when purchased?
- Did the defect occur within one year from delivery or within 20,000 kilometers?
- Does the defect substantially impair use, value, or safety?
- Was the vehicle brought to an authorized service center?
- Are there at least four repair attempts for the same issue?
- Are all job orders and service reports available?
- Was written notice sent to the dealer, distributor, manufacturer, or retailer?
- Was the vehicle made available for inspection and repair?
- Are photos, videos, and receipts preserved?
- Is the requested remedy clearly stated?
XXXII. Practical Tips for a Strong Claim
A consumer should be precise, organized, and persistent. The complaint should focus on facts, dates, mileage, repair attempts, and the continuing defect.
The consumer should create a table like this:
| Date |
Mileage |
Complaint |
Service Center |
Job Order No. |
Action Taken |
Result |
| [Date] |
[km] |
[Defect] |
[Dealer] |
[No.] |
[Repair] |
[Defect returned] |
| [Date] |
[km] |
[Same defect] |
[Dealer] |
[No.] |
[Repair] |
[Defect returned] |
This format makes it easier for the DTI, the dealer, or a lawyer to understand the case.
XXXIII. Strategic Considerations
A consumer should determine the desired outcome early. Some consumers primarily want a safe and properly working vehicle. Others want replacement or refund because they have lost confidence in the vehicle.
The requested remedy should match the seriousness of the problem. A minor defect may justify repair, but not necessarily replacement. A recurring safety-related defect may support stronger relief.
Settlement is also possible. A dealer may offer extended warranty, parts replacement, service credits, vehicle replacement, buyback, or other compensation. The consumer should carefully review any settlement document before signing, especially if it contains a waiver or release of claims.
XXXIV. Legal Risks of Improper Handling
Consumers should avoid actions that may damage their own claim. These include refusing reasonable inspection, failing to follow maintenance schedules, authorizing third-party repairs without documentation, making unsupported accusations, or disposing of evidence.
Dealers and manufacturers also face risks if they ignore valid Lemon Law claims, refuse documentation, delay repairs, or fail to comply with lawful orders.
XXXV. Conclusion
The Philippine Lemon Law gives buyers of brand-new defective motor vehicles a meaningful remedy when a serious defect remains unresolved despite repeated repair attempts. It is not a shortcut for every vehicle complaint, but it is an important consumer protection law for genuinely defective new cars.
To claim rights under the law, the consumer must act within the Lemon Law rights period of one year from delivery or 20,000 kilometers, whichever comes first. The defect must substantially impair the vehicle’s use, value, or safety. The same defect must be brought for repair through the proper process, and the consumer must keep complete documentation.
A successful claim depends on discipline and evidence. The buyer should document the defect, preserve job orders, send written notices, comply with authorized repair procedures, request transportation allowance when applicable, and file a complaint with the DTI if the matter is not resolved.
For consumers who purchased a brand-new vehicle that repeatedly fails, the Philippine Lemon Law provides a structured path toward repair, replacement, refund, or other lawful relief.