Carvana vehicle suffers repeat transmission failures despite warranty repairs
A Carvana-purchased vehicle developed transmission problems within weeks of purchase; a first replacement transmission was rejected by technicians as defective before installation, and a second remanufactured unit failed again after about 17 months. The owner is requesting an exception to exchange the vehicle for a comparable one with the remaining loan balance carried over, since return-window buyer's-remorse policies do not address a recurring major mechanical defect.
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Similar Problems
surfaced semanticallyUsed Car Marketplaces Sell Defective Vehicles With Undisclosed Major Mechanical Failures
Carvana customers report purchasing certified vehicles that immediately develop severe mechanical failures like transmission replacements within days of delivery. Warranty repairs are slow, incomplete, or repeat failures occur. The gap between vehicle inspection claims and actual condition leaves buyers stranded without usable transportation.
Carvana sold lemon vehicle with cascading mechanical failures and refuses refund
A customer purchased a vehicle that suffered engine failure within 3 weeks, followed by transmission failure within 24 hours of engine replacement. Despite cascading mechanical failures qualifying as a lemon, Carvana refused a refund and left the buyer with substantial out-of-pocket costs. The dispute resolution process offered no viable escalation path.
Carvana used vehicle loses power and may have undisclosed prior repairs
A buyer reports a recently purchased Carvana vehicle is losing power and shows mechanical issues just past warranty, with suspected undisclosed structural repairs at point of sale. Vendor-specific complaint and remedy request.
Online Car Buyers Receive Defective Vehicles With No Actionable Recourse Path
Consumers purchasing cars through online-only platforms like Carvana frequently receive vehicles with undisclosed mechanical problems that surface within days of delivery. The return and repair process is slow, opaque, and forces buyers into costly holding patterns without clear escalation paths. Lemon law protections exist but are complex to invoke without legal guidance.
Carvana Sells Cars With Undisclosed Defects and Refuses Return Window Extensions
Online car buyers from Carvana discover serious mechanical defects shortly after purchase, only to find the 7-day return window too short to complete diagnosis at authorized dealerships. The platform inspection reporting does not match actual vehicle condition, and customer service refuses accommodations. This represents a systemic online used-car buying trust problem.
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