Pembroke Pines Lemon Law
Drivers in Pembroke Pines are covered by the Florida Motor Vehicle Warranty Enforcement Act (Fla. Stat. §§ 681.10-681.118). If your new or used vehicle has a substantial defect the dealer can't fix, you may be entitled to a refund, replacement, or cash settlement. The manufacturer pays the legal fees — you pay nothing out of pocket.
Where Pembroke Pines cases are filed
Florida New Motor Vehicle Arbitration Board (Office of the Attorney General)
PL-01 The Capitol, Tallahassee, FL 32399-1050
https://www.myfloridalegal.com/lemon-law/lemon-law-main-page →Why local conditions matter
How Pembroke Pines's driving environment affects vehicle reliability
Pembroke Pines experiences high humidity and intense summer heat typical of inland Broward, with somewhat less salt-air exposure than coastal cities. Long commutes on I-75 and the Turnpike to Miami and Fort Lauderdale subject vehicles to sustained heat-soak and stop-and-go traffic that stress transmissions, A/C systems, and electronics during the long summer season.
Major routes: I-75 · Florida's Turnpike · I-595 · Pines Boulevard (SR 820) · Sheridan Street (SR 822)
A/C compressor and HVAC failures on long bi-county commutes
Pembroke Pines residents commute long distances on I-75 and the Turnpike to Miami-Dade and downtown Fort Lauderdale in 90-plus-degree heat, forcing A/C compressors to run at maximum duty cycle for hours daily, accelerating compressor clutch wear, condenser leaks, and blower-motor failures that recur after multiple warranty repairs.
Transmission shudder and harsh shifts in congested commute traffic
Sustained I-75 and Pines Boulevard congestion during peak hours subjects automatic and dual-clutch transmissions to repeated low-speed engagement cycles in extreme heat, surfacing calibration errors, clutch-pack wear, and harness-connector failures producing repeat shudder and harsh-shift complaints across multiple service visits.
Infotainment and module reboots from outdoor heat-soak
Vehicles parked uncovered at master-planned community lots and Pembroke Lakes Mall reach dashboard temperatures that exceed head-unit thermal specs, causing repeated touchscreen blackouts, backup-camera failures, and lost CarPlay/Android Auto connectivity that recur within weeks of each dealer software flash.
12V auxiliary battery drain in hybrids and EVs
Sustained heat-soak combined with short trips between Pembroke Pines master-planned communities and long highway commutes creates inconsistent charging cycles that prevent 12V batteries from fully recharging, producing repeat no-start, stop-safely-now, and hybrid-system warnings dealers cannot resolve through battery replacement alone.
Dealership clusters
Pembroke Pines residents typically shop at dealerships clustered along Pines Boulevard (SR 820) and the SR-7 (US-441) corridor in Pembroke Pines and Miramar, with secondary clusters along Sheridan Street in Hollywood and along US-441 in southern Broward. Many luxury and import buyers travel to the larger franchise concentrations along Federal Highway in Fort Lauderdale or along the Bird Road corridor in West Miami-Dade for greater selection.
Brands we see most
Pembroke Pines' mix skews toward Toyota, Honda, Nissan, Ford, and Kia driven by the city's master-planned family demographic and dual-income commuter base. Luxury share is moderate, with Lexus, BMW, and Mercedes-Benz electronics and HVAC complaints during 24-month leases driving a meaningful portion of Broward arbitration filings. EV adoption is rising, with Tesla and Hyundai/Kia electric models increasingly appearing in repair-related complaints.
Areas served around Pembroke Pines
- Pembroke Falls
- SilverLakes
- Chapel Trail
- Spring Valley
- Pembroke Shores
- Walnut Creek
Your rights under Florida law
Florida Motor Vehicle Warranty Enforcement Act
Florida Motor Vehicle Warranty Enforcement Act (Fla. Stat. §§ 681.10-681.118) gives Florida drivers the right to a refund, replacement, or cash settlement when the manufacturer can't fix a substantial defect. The threshold is 3 repair attempts or 30 cumulative days out of service, within 24 months of delivery.
Full Florida lemon law guide →Common questions
Lemon law in Pembroke Pines, FL
Where do Pembroke Pines consumers file Florida lemon law claims?
All Florida lemon law arbitration cases are filed with the Florida New Motor Vehicle Arbitration Board, administered statewide by the Office of the Attorney General. South Florida hearings are typically conducted by a regional panel in Broward or Miami-Dade County, so you do not have to travel to Tallahassee. Before filing, you must send the manufacturer written notice by certified mail of a final repair attempt. If your manufacturer participates in a state-certified informal dispute settlement program such as BBB AUTO LINE, you must use that program first. Civil suits in Broward County Circuit Court are generally limited to appeals from arbitration or claims outside the lemon law statute.
Do long Turnpike commutes count against my lemon law claim?
Florida's lemon law focuses on whether a defect substantially impairs use, value, or safety and arose within the 24-month rights period, not on commute distance or driving conditions. Manufacturers cannot defeat a claim by blaming long I-75 or Turnpike commutes for transmission shudder or HVAC failure if the vehicle is designed and warranted for normal use in South Florida. Document every visit with a written repair order, even when the dealer writes 'no trouble found,' because the Board evaluates the pattern of repeat complaints rather than the diagnostic outcome at any single visit.
How long does Florida arbitration take for a Pembroke Pines case?
Once the New Motor Vehicle Arbitration Board accepts your case, Florida law requires a hearing within 40 days and a written decision within 60 days. Broward hearings are typically scheduled in the county to avoid Tallahassee travel. If your manufacturer's certified informal program such as BBB AUTO LINE handles your case first, expect roughly 40 additional days before escalation. Realistic total timeline from initial filing to a Board decision is three to five months, plus a 30-day window for either side to appeal to Broward County Circuit Court for a trial de novo. Pre-arbitration certified-mail notice and document gathering may add another month.
What if I bought my car at a Fort Lauderdale, Miami, or Davie dealership?
Florida's lemon law applies statewide, so it does not matter where in Broward, Miami-Dade, or Palm Beach County you purchased. You file once with the Florida New Motor Vehicle Arbitration Board regardless of dealership location. Repair attempts at any authorized franchised dealer in the manufacturer's network count toward the three-attempt or 30-day-out-of-service threshold. Keep written repair orders from every location because the Board considers the total pattern across all visits, not just visits to your selling dealer. Many Pembroke Pines buyers shop throughout the tri-county area for selection, creating no jurisdictional issues.
Are leased vehicles covered?
Yes. Florida's lemon law expressly covers leased vehicles when the lease term is at least one year, the lease is in writing, and the lessee bears repair responsibility, or when the arrangement is a lease-purchase agreement. Most luxury leases in Pembroke Pines qualify. Remedies for lessees include unwinding the lease, recovering the cash down payment, monthly payments made, and the residual or payoff to the lessor, reduced by Florida's standard mileage offset. The lease assignee (typically the manufacturer's captive finance arm) is required to cooperate in the refund process under the statute.
What is the deadline to file in Florida?
Florida gives you only one year after the 24-month Lemon Law Rights Period expires to file with the New Motor Vehicle Arbitration Board, or one year after the final decision of a certified informal program. That effectively gives most Pembroke Pines consumers up to three years from original delivery to invoke arbitration. After a Board decision, either party has 30 days to appeal to Broward County Circuit Court for a trial de novo. This is one of the shortest filing windows in the country, so once you suspect a lemon, send your final-repair certified-mail notice promptly rather than waiting for one more dealer repair attempt.
What compensation does Florida's lemon law provide?
Successful Pembroke Pines claimants receive either a comparable replacement vehicle or a full refund of the purchase price including sales tax, title, registration, dealer documentary fees, and finance charges, reduced by a mileage offset calculated as miles driven multiplied by the base sale price divided by 120,000. Attorney's fees and costs are recoverable from the manufacturer separately under the statute, so most qualifying consumers pay nothing out of pocket. The Florida Department of Legal Affairs can also assess civil penalties up to $1,000 per violation against manufacturers, but those penalties fund the state Motor Vehicle Warranty Trust Fund rather than the consumer.
Stuck with a lemon in Pembroke Pines?
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