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Benton County

Corvallis Lemon Law

Drivers in Corvallis are covered by the Oregon Lemon Law (Or. Rev. Stat. §§ 646A.400-646A.418). 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 Corvallis cases are filed

Benton County Circuit Court

120 NW 4th St, Corvallis, OR 97330

https://www.courts.oregon.gov/courts/benton/Pages/default.aspx →

Why local conditions matter

How Corvallis's driving environment affects vehicle reliability

Corvallis sits in the mid-Willamette Valley with NOAA-recorded annual rainfall near 43 inches and dense winter valley fog. The Oregon State University commuter base and OR-34 access to I-5 generate steady all-weather highway use that stresses ADAS, brakes, and HVAC.

Major routes:  US Route 20 · Oregon Route 99W · Oregon Route 34 · Oregon Route 99E

ADAS fog and lane-marking detection faults

Persistent Willamette Valley fog combined with OSU commuter traffic on US-20 and OR-34 exposes lane-keep, forward-camera, and adaptive-cruise sensor occlusion defects that recur for Corvallis owners and qualify as substantial impairment of safety under ORS 646A.400 when dealer recalibrations do not resolve them.

Sunroof drain and headliner water intrusion

Heavy winter rainfall combined with mature canopy parking near OSU drops Douglas fir needles and debris that clog sunroof drains, leading to recurring water-intrusion claims and B-pillar electronics failures that owners pursue under bumper-to-bumper warranty over multiple unsuccessful dealer visits.

Cold-start emissions and DEF dosing complaints on diesels

Cold damp valley mornings combined with frequent short-trip city driving in Corvallis trigger DEF dosing, NOx sensor, and EGR system warning lights on light-duty diesels that recur after dealer reflashes because the underlying root cause only appears during cold-start cycles.

Dealership clusters

Corvallis's franchised dealer footprint runs along the South 3rd Street and Pacific Boulevard corridors south of downtown, with a smaller north-side cluster on 9th Street. Many Corvallis buyers also shop the Albany cluster on Pacific Boulevard across the Willamette via US-20 because Albany offers a wider range of brands.

Brands we see most

Corvallis skews heavily toward Subaru, Toyota, and Honda reflecting the OSU university-town demographic and outdoor-recreation lifestyle, with rising EV adoption among faculty and staff. Domestic full-size truck share runs below Oregon averages outside of the Philomath rural perimeter.

Areas served around Corvallis

  • Downtown
  • South Town
  • Country Club
  • Witham Hill
  • Timberhill
  • Philomath

Your rights under Oregon law

Oregon Lemon Law

Oregon Lemon Law (Or. Rev. Stat. §§ 646A.400-646A.418) gives Oregon 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 Oregon lemon law guide →

Common questions

Lemon law in Corvallis, OR

Where do I file a lemon law lawsuit in Corvallis?

Corvallis residents file lemon law actions in the Benton County Circuit Court at 120 NW 4th Street in downtown Corvallis. Oregon's lemon law is enforced through the regular civil division of the circuit court, and the Oregon eCourt eFiling system is mandatory for represented parties. Under ORS 14.080 venue is proper in your home county, where the dealer or manufacturer transacts business, or where the vehicle was purchased. Corvallis buyers who shopped Albany or Eugene often have venue in either Benton, Linn, or Lane County depending on where they took delivery.

How does Willamette Valley fog affect lemon law claims in Corvallis?

Dense winter valley fog combined with smoke during late-summer wildfire season exposes ADAS camera and radar sensor occlusion defects that recur for Corvallis owners on US-20 and OR-34. Oregon's lemon law under ORS 646A.400 covers defects that substantially impair use, value, or safety, and a lane-keep or forward-collision system that consistently fails in normal Willamette Valley weather generally meets that standard. Document each visit with a written repair order describing the same complaint so repeat sensor or camera issues clearly meet the three-attempts presumption under ORS 646A.406.

Does Oregon's lemon law cover used vehicles bought in Corvallis?

No. Oregon's lemon law under ORS 646A.400 covers only new motor vehicles purchased or registered in Oregon during the two-year/24,000-mile coverage period from original delivery. Used vehicles bought from Corvallis dealerships, including certified pre-owned units, are excluded. However, used-car buyers in Benton County still have potentially powerful rights under the federal Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act, any remaining factory warranty, dealer-extended service contracts, and Oregon's Unlawful Trade Practices Act if the dealer concealed prior accident damage, salvage history, or other material defects at the time of sale.

What is the deadline to file a Corvallis lemon law case?

Under ORS 646A.416 you must file within one year after the expiration of the coverage period, which generally means about three years from original delivery. The coverage period itself ends at the earlier of two years or 24,000 miles. Corvallis OSU faculty and staff commuting on OR-34 to I-5 may hit the mileage cap before the time cap. Time spent in a qualifying informal dispute settlement program tolls the clock, and Magnuson-Moss federal warranty claims pled alongside the state lemon law generally follow Oregon's four-year UCC limitations period from delivery.

How many repair attempts qualify under Oregon law for Corvallis drivers?

ORS 646A.406 presumes a reasonable number of attempts after three repair visits for the same nonconformity, or 30 cumulative days out of service during the two-year/24,000-mile coverage period. Safety-related defects likely to cause death or serious bodily injury require only one attempt plus a final opportunity. Before invoking the presumption you must send the manufacturer written notice and a final chance to cure. Corvallis service customers at South 3rd Street or Pacific Boulevard dealers should always insist on a written repair order each visit even when the dealer reports no fault duplicated.

Are leased vehicles registered in Corvallis covered?

Yes. ORS 646A.400 defines 'consumer' to include lessees and any person entitled to enforce the manufacturer's warranty, so a new vehicle leased through a Corvallis-area dealer or captive lender qualifies for the same refund-or-replacement remedy as a purchased car. The statutory refund formula in ORS 646A.404 references both cash price and lease price, and lessees recover collateral charges including Oregon DMV title, registration, license fees, and finance charges. Used leases, lease assumptions, and lease-end buyouts are not covered because the lemon law only protects the original consumer during the initial coverage period.

Do I have to arbitrate before suing in Benton County?

Only if the manufacturer has established an informal dispute settlement procedure that substantially complies with 16 C.F.R. Part 703 and has notified you of it in writing. Most major manufacturers selling in Corvallis participate in BBB AUTO LINE or a comparable program. In that case ORS 646A.408 requires you to use the program first before pursuing the statutory refund-or-replacement remedy in court. The arbitration decision binds the manufacturer but not the consumer, so you can reject it and file in Benton County Circuit Court. Magnuson-Moss federal warranty claims generally do not require exhausting the manufacturer's program.

Stuck with a lemon in Corvallis?

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