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Ohio Lemon Law Guide

Buyer rights, coverage thresholds, and how to file a claim in Ohio.

1 yr

Coverage Period

18,000

Miles

3

Repair Attempts

30

Days Out of Service

What Ohio Lemon Law Covers

New motor vehicles only. The law protects buyers when a vehicle has a substantial defect that the manufacturer cannot repair after a reasonable number of attempts.

Used Car Coverage in Ohio

Ohio lemon law covers new vehicles only. Used car purchasers should rely on any express warranty provided by the dealer and the UCC implied warranty of merchantability.

Qualifying Criteria

To qualify under Ohio lemon law, a vehicle must meet at least one of the following thresholds within the coverage window:

CriterionOhio Threshold
Same defect repair attempts3 attempts
Out-of-service days (cumulative)30 days
Coverage window — time1 year from original delivery
Coverage window — mileage18,000 miles
State note: Ohio covers 1 year or 18,000 miles — a slightly broader mileage window than some states. The vehicle must have a defect that substantially impairs its use, value, or safety.

Arbitration and Dispute Resolution

Ohio requires you to go through an arbitration or dispute resolution program before filing a lawsuit.

Ohio requires you to attempt resolution through the manufacturer's informal dispute settlement program before filing a civil action.

How to File a Lemon Law Claim in Ohio

  1. 1

    Document every repair attempt

    Keep all repair orders with dates, mileage, and defect descriptions. You need written proof the same issue was reported and repaired multiple times.

  2. 2

    Track out-of-service days

    Record every day the vehicle was at the dealer for repairs. A cumulative total of 30 or more days can independently qualify the vehicle.

  3. 3

    Send written notice to the manufacturer

    Mail a certified letter to the manufacturer (not the dealer) describing the unresolved defect and requesting a final repair opportunity.

  4. 4

    Use the dispute resolution program

    Ohio requires you to attempt resolution through the manufacturer's informal dispute settlement program before filing a civil action.

  5. 5

    File with the state agency or court

    Contact the Ohio Attorney General — Consumer Protection Section or file in Ohio civil court. Bring all repair orders, purchase documents, and correspondence.

  6. 6

    Collect your remedy

    A successful claim results in a full refund or replacement vehicle. The manufacturer pays attorney fees in most states.

Lemon Law and Bill of Sale

If your vehicle was repurchased under lemon law, the title will carry a "Lemon Law Buyback" brand in most states. When selling this vehicle, you must disclose the lemon history on the bill of sale and title. Hiding this information is fraud.

Buyers seeing a "Lemon Law Buyback" brand on a title should expect a significant price reduction and obtain a full mechanical inspection before purchasing.

Ohio Lemon Law — FAQ

Does Ohio lemon law cover used cars?
Ohio lemon law covers new vehicles only. Used car purchasers should rely on any express warranty provided by the dealer and the UCC implied warranty of merchantability.
How many repair attempts qualify in Ohio?
3 repair attempts for the same defect, or the vehicle being out of service for 30+ cumulative days within the coverage period.
Does private party sale trigger lemon law?
No. Lemon laws in virtually all states apply only to purchases from dealers or manufacturers. Private party sales are buyer beware.
What remedy can I get?
A full refund (purchase price minus mileage offset) or a replacement vehicle. The manufacturer must also cover incidental costs and attorney fees in most states.

Official Resource

Ohio Attorney General — Consumer Protection Section

Other States

Trusted by private vehicle sellers nationwide

45% faster sale

Vehicles whose listings include a history report spend ~45% less time on site before selling, and report-viewers are 5x more likely to become a lead.

Source: Experian / AutoCheck

$4,000 avg loss

NHTSA estimates 450,000+ vehicles per year are sold with rolled-back odometers — the average victim loses about $4,000 in downstream repair costs.

Source: NHTSA

17.5M private sales/yr

About 17.5 million private-party vehicle transactions happen in the U.S. each year — roughly 47% of the used market.

Source: Cox Automotive 2024

1 in 3 buyers

Roughly 1 in 3 used-car buyers say they suspect private sellers are hiding mechanical problems — documentation closes that trust gap.

Source: JW Surety Bonds (n=3,000)

$60–$85 mobile notary

Mobile notary visit minimums run $60–$85 — higher on weekends, plus per-mile travel fees. State-formatted documents skip the trip.

Source: Thumbtack / NNA