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Pennsylvania Lemon Law Case Value Calculator

In Pennsylvania, a lemon law buyback (repurchase) refunds what you paid for the vehicle minus a "mileage offset" for the use you got before the defect appeared. Using the common statutory formula, the offset equals the miles driven before your first repair attempt divided by 120,000, multiplied by the purchase price. On a $35,000 vehicle with 6,000 miles at the first repair attempt, the offset is about $1,750 — so the buyback would be roughly $33,250, plus incidental costs like taxes, registration, and towing. Our calculator applies this same formula to your numbers.

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In Pennsylvania, you generally have 6 years to file a lemon law claim. What your case is worth depends on your specific damages and Pennsylvania's laws — use the calculator below for a free estimate of your low-to-high range.

Key Pennsylvania Laws

Filing Deadline6 years
longer than the national average of 4.1 years
Repair-Attempt Presumption3 attempts
Failed repairs that presume a lemon
Days Out of Service30 days
Cumulative days that presume a lemon
Used VehiclesNew only
Used cars: see federal Magnuson-Moss
Attorney FeesPaid by manufacturer
If you win your claim

How Pennsylvania Law Affects Your Lemon Law Case

Pennsylvania recognizes a "lemon presumption" that shifts the burden to the manufacturer once your repair history crosses set thresholds. If the dealer cannot fix the same substantial, warranty-covered defect after 3 repair attempts, or if the vehicle is out of service for a cumulative 30 days, the vehicle is presumed to be a lemon. This presumption generally applies within the first 24 months or 24,000 miles of ownership.

Pennsylvania's state lemon law generally covers new vehicles purchased with a manufacturer's warranty. If your vehicle is used or falls outside the state statute, you may still have a claim under the federal Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act, which applies to written warranties nationwide.

You generally have 6 years to bring a lemon law claim in Pennsylvania, longer than the national average of 4.1 years. Acting before the warranty expires and while repair records are fresh protects your claim. When a vehicle qualifies, Pennsylvania requires the manufacturer to repurchase or replace it rather than keep attempting repairs. Because Pennsylvania's lemon law shifts attorney fees to the manufacturer when you prevail, most lemon law attorneys take these cases on contingency at no upfront cost.

How Does Pennsylvania Compare?

6 yrs
Filing Deadline
Avg: 4.1 yrs
Modified
Fault System
Modified Comparative Fault (51% Bar)

Pennsylvania Lemon Law FAQs

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Legal Disclaimer

This calculator uses Pennsylvania's statutes as of 2026-03-06. Laws change frequently. This tool provides estimates for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Verify current rules with a Pennsylvania-licensed attorney before making decisions about your case. Learn about our methodology.

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