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Wyoming · Article Updated May 27, 2026

EV-Specific Defects Under the Wyoming Lemon Law

When electric-vehicle defects qualify under Wyoming's lemon law — battery range loss, charging failures, and cold-weather degradation — in a cold, sparsely charged state.

Electric vehicles bring their own qualifying defects, and Wyoming’s extreme cold and long distances make some of them especially pronounced. EV defects qualify under the same substantial-impairment standard as any other.

EV defects that typically qualify

  • Battery range loss — usable range well below the rating, or rapid degradation.
  • Charging failures — won’t accept AC or DC fast charge; intermittent charging faults.
  • Cold-weather degradation — drastic range loss in deep cold beyond normal expectations.
  • Thermal-management faults — battery overheating or cooling/heating system failures.
  • Drive-unit / inverter failures — power loss, shutdowns, limp mode.
  • High-voltage system faults — repeated warnings or sudden shutdowns.
  • 12-volt system issues that disable a vehicle whose systems depend on it.

Cold weather vs. a defect

Every EV loses some range in cold — that alone isn’t a defect. The lemon-law question is whether the loss is abnormal, persistent, and beyond what the manufacturer represents. Wyoming’s deep cold and long inter-town distances make this a real dispute, so document:

  • Range at full charge versus the rating, with the temperature.
  • Charging-session failures (location, charger type, error).
  • Whether preconditioning was used.

The Wyoming charging reality

Wyoming’s public fast-charging network is sparse and spread across long distances, so a charging-system defect bites harder here than in a dense metro — strengthening the substantial-impairment argument.

What you need to show

  1. Substantial impairment — range or charging problems that limit normal use (§ 40-17-101).
  2. A reasonable number of attempts — more than 3 repairs, or 30 business days out of service, within one year (software updates for the same defect count). See the presumption.
  3. That you reported within one year of delivery.

For brand-specific EV patterns, see Tesla and the manufacturers hub.

Bottom line

Abnormal range loss, charging failures, and thermal faults qualify under Wyoming’s lemon law — document range, temperature, and every failed charge to separate a real defect from normal cold-weather behavior. Get a free case review.

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