Lemon Law in Wyoming

State-specific overview · General Legal

Quick summary

Wyoming requires the manufacturer to repair defects or provide a refund or replacement vehicle after a reasonable number of repair attempts.

How Wyoming treats Lemon Law

Wyoming's lemon law protects buyers of vehicles with defects substantially impairing safety, use, or value, reported during the warranty period. The manufacturer gets a reasonable number of repair attempts—generally three for the same defect or four total—before you can demand a refund or replacement. If repairs take the vehicle out of service for 30 or more cumulative days, you may have grounds for relief. Wyoming's law is relatively standard and does not contain major unique provisions compared to other states.

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The general definition of Lemon Law

State laws protecting consumers who buy defective vehicles that the manufacturer cannot repair.

Lemon laws are consumer protection statutes that give buyers the right to a refund or replacement if they purchase a new vehicle with serious defects that the manufacturer cannot fix within a reasonable number of attempts. These laws vary by state but generally apply to vehicles still under warranty. If a car qualifies as a lemon, the manufacturer must either replace it or refund the purchase price, minus a small deduction for mileage. Lemon laws protect consumers from being stuck with expensive, unreliable vehicles.

Read the full Lemon Law entry →

This page is a plain-English reference and is not legal advice. State laws change frequently. For specific situations consult a licensed attorney in Wyoming.