Idaho Lemon Law: Your Rights

Last reviewed: June 28, 2026

Idaho's lemon law covers new vehicles. If a substantial defect under the manufacturer's express warranty cannot be fixed after a reasonable number of attempts, the manufacturer must either replace the vehicle with a comparable one or refund what you paid, including any trade-in value, up to 105% of the manufacturer's suggested retail price.

Idaho lemon law at a glance

Time / mileage window The warranty term, or 2 years or 24,000 miles, whichever is earliest
Repair attempts (presumption) 4 or more for the same defect
Days out of service 30 or more business days
Covers new vehicles Yes
Used-car lemon law No (new vehicles only)

What these rules mean for you

If your vehicle has a substantial defect that the manufacturer cannot fix after the repair attempts above, or it has been out of service for the listed time, you may have a lemon law claim. The remedy is usually a refund (a buyback) or a replacement vehicle. The details turn on your documentation, so keep every repair order from the first visit on. See what to document for a defect or lemon law claim.

A recall is not required for a claim, and recall repair attempts can count toward your total. For the full picture, read the pillar guide, recall vs. lemon law, and learn how many repair attempts before lemon law applies and how a buyback, replacement, or cash settlement compares.

Official Idaho sources

Verify the current rules with these authoritative sources: