Subaru Cases Under Minnesota Lemon Law
Subaru cases in Minnesota — Outback, Forester, Crosstrek, Ascent, WRX, Solterra, Boxer engine patterns.
Subaru has substantial Minnesota market share — particularly in Twin Cities suburbs and Northwoods outdoor communities. Subaru cases are pursued under Minn. Stat. § 325F.665.
Common Subaru defect patterns
- Boxer engine oil consumption (FB20 / FB25) — long-standing pattern.
- CVT failures — Outback, Forester, Legacy, Ascent.
- EyeSight system defects.
- Outback / Ascent transmission issues.
- Solterra EV charging, OTA issues — Minnesota cold relevant.
- WRX / STI clutch and ringland failures.
- Outback / Forester rear differential issues.
- Starlink infotainment crashes.
Minnesota Subaru market
Subaru does well in Minnesota’s snow-belt / outdoor segments — particularly Outback and Crosstrek among AWD-loyal buyers.
Subaru TSB / recall overlay
Heavy TSB pattern.
Bottom line
Subaru cases — Boxer engine oil consumption, CVT failures, EyeSight defect patterns — are well-positioned for Minnesota Lemon Law.
Related
Audi / Volkswagen Cases Under Minnesota Lemon Law
Audi and Volkswagen cases in Minnesota — EA888 turbo, DCT/DSG transmission, ID.4 EV, emissions-related patterns.
Read → ArticleBMW Cases Under Minnesota Lemon Law
BMW cases in Minnesota — N20, N63, B58 engine patterns, ZF 8HP transmission, i-series EV.
Read → ArticleFord Cases Under Minnesota Lemon Law
Ford cases in Minnesota — F-150, F-250/350, Bronco, Mustang Mach-E, Explorer, Escape.
Read → ArticleGeneral Motors (Chevrolet/GMC/Cadillac/Buick) Cases Under Minnesota Lemon Law
GM cases in Minnesota — Silverado, Sierra, Tahoe, Suburban, Equinox, Bolt, Hummer EV.
Read → ArticleHonda Cases Under Minnesota Lemon Law
Honda cases in Minnesota — Civic, Accord, CR-V, Pilot, Odyssey, Ridgeline.
Read → ArticleKia Cases Under Minnesota Lemon Law
Kia cases in Minnesota — Theta II engine failures (shared with Hyundai), EV6 / Niro EV, Telluride patterns.
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.