Infotainment Defects — When They Qualify in Georgia
Infotainment glitches usually don't qualify under Georgia Lemon Law. But when they cross into safety equipment, the analysis changes.
Modern infotainment glitches confined to entertainment generally don’t substantially impair the vehicle.
The default rule
Glitchy radio, navigation freezing, app-store issues typically don’t meet § 10-1-782(11)‘s substantial-impairment standard.
When infotainment failures cross the line
Backup camera failures
Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard 111 requires functional backup cameras on all new vehicles. A persistent backup camera failure qualifies under the substantial-impairment test.
Climate control via infotainment
Georgia summers make AC failure a substantial-impairment issue when AC controls are routed through infotainment. Defrost failures during occasional winter weather can similarly qualify.
ADAS warnings absent or unreliable
When infotainment failures suppress critical ADAS warnings (lane departure, forward collision, blind spot), they may cross into serious safety defect territory — strong FBPA exposure.
Tesla-specific issues
Tesla touchscreen failures (MCU1) have produced Georgia cases — when the touchscreen is the sole interface for safety-relevant functions, failures qualify.
Repair-attempt counting
Each reflash counts. Three reflashes meets Georgia’s three-attempt threshold.
OTA updates
Tesla and others. Trends toward “yes” when targeting a specific defect.
What manufacturers typically argue
- “User error” or “compatibility.”
- “Issue resolved by OTA update.”
- “Affected function isn’t safety-critical.”
What you should do
- Document each repair attempt.
- Note specific failure modes.
- Photograph or video symptoms.
- Send certified-mail notice.
- Get a free case review.
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Read →Think you've got a lemon?
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