The Indiana Lemon Law

In Indiana, state law provides legal protection in the form of lemon laws to help you if you purchase a used car that turns out to have serious defects. The Indiana lemon law sets standards that sellers must follow if the vehicles sold by them are found to have defects.

The Indiana Legislature established the Indiana lemon law or the Motor Vehicle Protection Act, in 1988.

  • The Indiana lemon law protects buyers of new and used vehicles in Indiana
  • The Indiana lemon law protects anyone who leases a vehicle under a written agreement
  • The lemon law protects consumers by providing them with safeguards against anyone selling a car that has serious defects

The Indiana lemon law applies to warrantied vehicles that

  • Weigh less than 10,000 pounds
  • Registered in Indiana
  • Used on public highways and other roads
  • Require registration or licensing before use

The Indiana lemon law does not cover conversion vans, motor homes, farm tractors, snowmobiles, motorcycles or ATVs.

The Indiana lemon law requires:

  • The manufacturers to repair, replace or repurchase a vehicle sold to the consumer if it has defects that substantially impair the use, market value or safety
  • Consumers to take their vehicles to the dealer or seller to report the problem and request repairs as soon as possible

The Indiana lemon law allows a buyer a limited amount of time to make a lemon law claim on a vehicle that is within 18,000 miles or 18 months from the date of the delivery of the vehicle. The Indiana lemon law protects a consumer if he has first requested for repairs within the set period of the 18-month period.

The Indiana lemon law allows the seller or the manufacturer another chance of repairing the vehicle which means that the Indiana lemon law provides for ‘a reasonable number of repair attempts’. According to the Indiana lemon law, the ‘reasonable number’ is four. The Indiana lemon law allows 30 business days for repairs. The Indiana lemon law requires the seller or manufacturer to provide the buyer with an alternative vehicle while the vehicle is subjected to repairs.

According to the Indiana lemon law, if the issue persists even after the reasonable number of repairs, the seller or manufacturer must buy back the vehicle or provide a replacement within 30 days.

  • The repurchase price must be equal to the total contract price at the time of sale
  • The repurchase price must include all sales tax
  • The repurchase price must include the registration fee and excise tax paid by the buyer at the time the vehicle was purchased
  • The repurchase price must include incidental expenses incurred by the consumer for towing and rental car caused by the nonconformity

Disclaimer: This information is not intended as legal advice. Please direct your specific questions to K&M attorneys and know more about your lemon law rights. If you want to pursue your lemon law claim, call 1-800 US LEMON® (800-875-3666) toll-free, to reach Krohn &Moss for your FREE initial consultation. Or submit your information online for your free case evaluation.

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