Lawyers for Lemon Law — How to Find One and What It'll Cost You
If your car has a defect the dealer can't fix, you have legal rights — and getting a lawyer to enforce them costs you nothing out of pocket. Here's exactly how lemon law attorneys work, how to find a good one, and what to expect.
$0Upfront cost to hire a lemon law attorney
FreeConsultations — every lemon law attorney offers them
60–120Days to resolve most cases through arbitration
Most people with a valid lemon law case never hire an attorney — not because they can't afford one, but because they assume they can't. That assumption costs them. Lemon law attorneys are free to hire upfront. They work on contingency, and in most states the manufacturer is legally required to pay your attorney fees when you win. You don't pay a dollar out of pocket regardless of the outcome.
This page explains everything you need to know about finding lawyers for lemon law: how they get paid, what they actually do for you, how to find a good one, and what to ask before you commit.
The most important thing to understand: You are not hiring a lawyer and hoping to get your money back later. Under most state lemon laws, the manufacturer owes your attorney fees as part of the judgment — separate from your refund or settlement. Your full recovery goes to you. The lawyer gets paid by the car company.
What Does a Lemon Law Attorney Actually Do?
A lot of people assume hiring a lawyer means showing up to court. That's rarely how lemon law works. Here's what a lemon law attorney handles from start to finish:
Case evaluation: They review your repair orders and determine whether your situation meets your state's legal threshold — number of attempts, time window, type of defect.
Written notice: Most states require formal written notice to the manufacturer before filing. Your attorney drafts and sends this, certified mail, with the right language to preserve your legal rights.
Arbitration preparation: If your state requires arbitration first, they prepare your case file, assemble evidence, and represent you at the hearing.
Negotiation: Most cases settle without a hearing. Your attorney negotiates directly with the manufacturer's legal team — they know the tactics manufacturers use and how to counter them.
Court filing: If arbitration fails or isn't required, they file the lawsuit and handle all proceedings. You show up when needed; they handle the rest.
You provide the documentation — every repair order, every date, every written communication with the dealer. They do everything else.
How Lemon Law Attorneys Get Paid
There are two common fee structures in lemon law cases. Ask about this in your free consultation so you know exactly where you stand.
The Manufacturer Pays (Most Common)
In most states, when a consumer wins a lemon law claim, the law requires the manufacturer to pay the consumer's reasonable attorney fees on top of the refund or replacement. This means your attorney's fee comes from the manufacturer — completely separate from your settlement. You receive your full refund or replacement, and the attorney gets paid by the car company. This is the most consumer-friendly arrangement and is how most lemon law cases work.
Contingency Percentage (Less Common)
In some cases or states, an attorney may take a percentage of your settlement — typically 25–33% — instead of billing the manufacturer. If this is the arrangement, your attorney should disclose it clearly upfront. Always ask: "Do you bill the manufacturer for fees, or do you take a percentage of my settlement?" The answer tells you how your recovery will be structured.
Red flag to watch for: Any attorney who asks for upfront payment before results is not a legitimate lemon law attorney. All reputable lemon law lawyers offer free consultations and take cases on contingency. Walk away from anyone who asks you to pay before they've won anything for you.
Do You Actually Need a Lawyer?
Technically, no. You can file a lemon law claim yourself through your state's arbitration program or directly with the manufacturer. Some people do this successfully — especially with well-documented, clear-cut cases.
But here's the reality: manufacturers deal with lemon law claims every day. They have experienced legal teams, established negotiating tactics, and a financial incentive to minimize what they pay you. Going in without representation means you're negotiating against professionals who do this for a living.
Given that a lemon law attorney costs you nothing upfront and gets paid by the manufacturer when you win, the practical question isn't "can I afford a lawyer?" It's "why wouldn't I use one?"
The main reason someone might file without an attorney: their case is straightforward, their documentation is airtight, and they want to move faster than hiring and working with an attorney allows. That's a legitimate choice — but go in with eyes open.
How to Find Lawyers for Lemon Law Near You
The best approach is to search 2–3 directories, identify 3–4 attorneys in your state who specialize in lemon law, call each one for a free consultation, and then decide. Don't hire the first person you find — a 20-minute call with three attorneys tells you a lot.
We are not affiliated with any of the directories below, and no one has paid us to list them here. These are established legal resources we recommend based on their reputation and usefulness for finding qualified lemon law attorneys.
Every lemon law attorney offers a free initial consultation. Use it. A 15-minute call tells you whether this person is the right fit and whether your case is worth pursuing. Ask these questions:
Your 7-question consultation checklist
How many lemon law cases have you handled in my state? You want someone with real state-specific experience — not someone who handles lemon law occasionally alongside divorce and DUI cases.
What's your win rate on cases like mine? A reputable attorney will give you a real answer. Be skeptical of anyone who guarantees a win — that's a red flag, not a selling point.
Do you bill the manufacturer for fees, or do you take a percentage of my settlement? Understand exactly how you'll be paid and what they'll receive before you commit.
What happens if we lose? The answer should be: you pay nothing. Confirm this explicitly.
How long do you expect my case to take? Most arbitration cases resolve in 60–120 days. If they're telling you 2 years, ask why.
Will you handle my case personally, or will it be passed to a junior associate? Know who will actually be working on your case day to day.
What do you need from me to get started? A good attorney will tell you exactly what documentation to gather and how to send it. This also tells you whether they're organized and efficient.
What Makes a Good Lemon Law Attorney
The best lemon law attorneys are specialists, not generalists. Lemon law is a niche practice area — the state-specific rules, the manufacturer arbitration programs, and the negotiation dynamics are all specialized knowledge. An attorney who handles lemon law as 10% of their practice won't know the same things as someone who does it exclusively.
Look for:
A practice focused primarily or exclusively on consumer protection and lemon law
Experience with cases in your specific state — not just nationally
Clear, direct communication in the consultation — if they can't explain your case plainly, they won't explain the settlement offer plainly either
No pressure to commit during the consultation — reputable attorneys let you think it over
Verifiable reviews from real clients, not just awards and badges on their website
Frequently Asked Questions About Lemon Law Lawyers
Nothing upfront. Lemon law attorneys work on contingency — they only get paid if you win. When you win, the manufacturer pays their fees under most state laws, separate from your refund or settlement. You walk away with your full recovery and pay no legal fees out of pocket.
No — you can file through your state's arbitration program yourself. But most consumers are better off with an attorney. Manufacturers have experienced legal teams. A lemon law attorney knows the tactics manufacturers use, what evidence matters most, and how to negotiate a better settlement. And since it costs you nothing, there's little reason not to use one.
The most reliable sources are dedicated legal directories like Justia, Avvo, and FindLaw — all of which let you filter by state and practice area. Search for lemon law attorneys in your state, check their reviews and case history, and call 2–3 for free consultations before deciding. The directories listed above are a good starting point.
A lemon law attorney reviews your repair orders and documentation, determines whether your case meets your state's legal threshold, sends the required written notice to the manufacturer, handles arbitration or court proceedings on your behalf, and negotiates your settlement. They manage the entire process — you provide the documentation and answer questions when needed.
Most lemon law cases resolve in 60 to 120 days through arbitration. Cases that go to court can take 6 months to 2 years, but the vast majority settle before trial because manufacturers know the law and prefer to settle clearly documented cases quickly rather than fight them in court.
In most states, lemon law attorneys don't take a percentage of your settlement at all — the manufacturer pays their fees separately as part of the judgment or settlement agreement. Your full refund or replacement goes entirely to you. In a small number of cases or states, an attorney may take a percentage, so always clarify this in your free consultation.
Look for an attorney who focuses specifically on lemon law — not a general practice attorney who handles lemon law occasionally. Ask how many cases they've handled in your state, what their win rate is, and exactly how their fees work. A specialist will know the local judges, arbitrators, and manufacturer tactics that a generalist won't.
Yes. You can change attorneys at any point before your case resolves. If you switch, the new attorney and the old one will work out any fee arrangement between themselves — it doesn't typically affect your recovery amount.
Not Sure If You Have a Case?
Before you call an attorney, use our free lemon law checker to see if your situation qualifies — takes less than 60 seconds.
Lemon law is state-specific — so is finding the right attorney. Select your state below to search verified lemon law attorneys in your area through three of the most trusted legal directories.
We are not affiliated with any of these directories or attorneys. No one has paid us to appear here. These links open pre-filtered searches for lemon law attorneys in your selected state.
Related Guides
What Is Lemon Law? — The complete beginner's guide to how lemon law works
Lemon Law by State — Your state's specific rules, repair thresholds, and time limits