Does It Matter Which Repair Shop I Use in Michigan?
For Michigan Lemon Law purposes, only authorized manufacturer dealer repairs count toward § 257.1403 thresholds.
For Michigan Lemon Law purposes, only repairs by an authorized manufacturer dealer count toward § 257.1403 thresholds.
Why authorized-dealer repairs matter
Michigan Lemon Law requires repair attempts by the manufacturer or its authorized agents.
Repairs by independent mechanics, aftermarket chains, or owner work are generally not counted.
The practical implications
For warranty defects, go to an authorized dealer
The dealer bills manufacturer, issues a repair order, uses manufacturer parts, has access to TSBs.
For non-warranty work, independents are fine
Routine maintenance can go anywhere.
Magnuson-Moss and routine maintenance
Magnuson-Moss bars conditioning warranties on dealer-only routine maintenance.
What if my dealer refuses warranty repairs?
- Try a different authorized dealer.
- Escalate to manufacturer customer-relations.
- Document the refusal.
- Talk to a Michigan lemon-law attorney — refusals can support Magnuson-Moss federal claims.
What you should do
- Take warranty work to authorized dealer.
- Request the repair order at every visit.
- Don’t take warranty work to independents.
- Track loaner cars and out-of-service time toward the 30-day threshold.
- Get a free case review.
Related
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Read → ArticleThe Manufacturer Denied My Claim in Michigan — What Now?
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Read →Think you've got a lemon?
Compare your situation to your state's requirements — and connect with a vetted lemon-law attorney for a free case review.