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Suffolk County

Revere Lemon Law

Drivers in Revere are covered by the Massachusetts New Car Lemon Law (with separate Used Vehicle Warranty Law) (M.G.L. c. 90, § 7N1/2 (new vehicles); M.G.L. c. 90, § 7N1/4 (used vehicles)). If your new or used vehicle has a substantial defect the dealer can't fix, you may be entitled to a refund, replacement, or cash settlement. The manufacturer pays the legal fees — you pay nothing out of pocket.

Where Revere cases are filed

Suffolk County Superior Court - Boston

Three Pemberton Square, Boston, MA 02108

https://www.mass.gov/locations/suffolk-superior-court-civil →

Why local conditions matter

How Revere's driving environment affects vehicle reliability

Revere fronts directly on Broad Sound and Revere Beach, so vehicles face year-round salt-air exposure on top of roughly 48 inches of annual snowfall and heavy MassDOT brine on Route 1 and Route 1A. Nor'easter storm surge regularly floods the Revere Beach Boulevard and Broadway corridors.

Major routes:  Route 1 · Route 1A · Route 16 (Revere Beach Parkway) · Route 60

Coastal salt-air corrosion of brake and underbody hardware

Year-round oceanfront salt-air exposure plus heavy winter road brine on Route 1 accelerates brake-line, fuel-line, and subframe corrosion, producing pedal-fade complaints, ABS faults, and rust perforation that often appear within powertrain warranty coverage.

Storm-surge flood electrical faults

Nor'easter storm surge along Revere Beach Boulevard and lower Broadway routinely splashes saltwater through engine bays and underbody connectors, causing PCM/BCM corrosion and intermittent electrical glitches that dealers repeatedly fail to permanently diagnose.

Cold-start 12V battery failures

Dense apartment housing throughout Revere means most cars are parked curbside through long winter cold soaks, draining AGM and lithium auxiliary batteries and triggering stop-start, infotainment reboot, and no-start conditions inside the warranty period.

Brake corrosion and stop-and-go shudder

Continuous low-speed crawling along Broadway, Squire Road, and the Route 1A airport corridor combined with heavy salt brine produces pulsation, stuck-caliper drag, and torque-converter shudder that owners take in repeatedly without lasting warranty fix.

Dealership clusters

Most franchise dealerships serving Revere line Route 1 (the Lynnway / Newburyport Turnpike) through Revere, Saugus, and Lynn, with additional concentrations along Route 60 in Malden and the Mystic Valley Parkway in Medford. The Route 1 strip in Saugus carries the largest concentration of full-line domestic and import brands serving the North Shore commuter belt. Within Revere itself, automotive retail mixes franchise dealers along Route 1 with used-car lots and independent service shops along Broadway.

Brands we see most

Revere registrations skew toward Toyota, Honda, Hyundai, Nissan, and Kia, reflecting an affordability-focused commuter population with heavy rideshare use. Subaru AWD share is significant for winter and EV adoption is growing with MBTA Blue Line transit-oriented development.

Areas served around Revere

  • Beachmont
  • Point of Pines
  • Oak Island
  • Revere Beach
  • West Revere
  • Crescent Beach

Your rights under Massachusetts law

Massachusetts New Car Lemon Law (with separate Used Vehicle Warranty Law)

Massachusetts New Car Lemon Law (with separate Used Vehicle Warranty Law) (M.G.L. c. 90, § 7N1/2 (new vehicles); M.G.L. c. 90, § 7N1/4 (used vehicles)) gives Massachusetts drivers the right to a refund, replacement, or cash settlement when the manufacturer can't fix a substantial defect. The threshold is 3 repair attempts or 15 cumulative days out of service, within 12 months of delivery.

Full Massachusetts lemon law guide →

Common questions

Lemon law in Revere, MA

Where do Revere residents file a Massachusetts lemon law claim?

Most Revere owners begin with the free state-certified arbitration program run by the Office of Consumer Affairs and Business Regulation (OCABR), which requires manufacturer participation when applied for within 18 months of delivery. Civil suits are filed in Suffolk County Superior Court in Boston for matters over $50,000 or in Chelsea District Court for smaller matters. Pure Chapter 93A claims can be filed in Superior Court regardless of amount. Used-car cases under section 7N1/4 follow the same venue framework, with a separate state arbitration track. An attorney typically handles venue selection because it affects discovery scope and trial timing.

Does coastal salt-air affect my Revere lemon law case?

Yes. Year-round oceanfront salt-air plus heavy winter road brine on Route 1 and Route 1A accelerates brake-line, fuel-line, and subframe corrosion well inside the warranty period. Manufacturers cannot routinely deny warranty coverage by blaming the coastal environment; if the corrosion causes a substantial defect during the warranty period and three repair attempts fail to fix it, you have a lemon law claim. Document each repair order, technician note about corrosion, and any safety-related symptoms (pedal feel, ABS, steering). Photos dated and tagged to repair orders strengthen the file substantially at OCABR arbitration.

What if my car was flooded by a Revere Beach storm surge?

Storm-surge saltwater intrusion frequently causes long-tail electrical and corrosion failures that surface weeks or months after the storm. If your vehicle was driven through or sat in storm-surge floodwater, your insurance carrier may declare it a total loss. If it remains on the road and the manufacturer's warranty does not cover the resulting electrical faults, you may still have a Chapter 93A claim against the dealer if a flood-damaged vehicle was sold to you without disclosure. Massachusetts requires written disclosure of prior flood damage. Lemon law remedies are strongest when the failures occur inside the original warranty.

Are leased vehicles covered for Revere drivers?

Yes. The Massachusetts New Car Lemon Law expressly defines lessees as consumers, so leased new vehicles receive the same 1-year / 15,000-mile rights window and refund or replacement remedy. If a replacement is provided, the manufacturer must supply an identical model for the remainder of the original lease term. For a refund, the manufacturer pays the lessor for the residual and refunds the lessee's down payment and lease payments, less the statutory use allowance. The lessee is then released from any further obligation under the original lease. Captive finance companies cannot retaliate against lessees who exercise these rights.

Can I recover triple damages in Revere?

Yes. Under M.G.L. c. 93A any lemon law violation is per se an unfair and deceptive trade practice. If the manufacturer's conduct was willful or knowing, or if it rejected a reasonable settlement demand in bad faith, the court must award between double and triple your actual damages plus attorney's fees and costs. The process starts with a 30-day Chapter 93A demand letter citing the specific repair history, the defect, and the remedy requested. Manufacturers that respond with a written settlement offer the court later finds reasonable can cap their exposure to that offer, so working with an attorney before sending the demand is critical.

How long do I have to file a Revere lemon law claim?

For new vehicles, you must apply to the OCABR state-certified arbitration program within 18 months of original delivery for manufacturer participation to be mandatory. Pure Chapter 93A unfair-practices claims carry a four-year statute of limitations. Used-car civil actions under section 7N1/4 must be filed within two years of original delivery. Appeals from OCABR arbitration decisions must be filed within 21 days in district or superior court. The state arbitration program issues decisions within 45 days of accepting an application, making it much faster than litigation while preserving your appeal rights.

Are used cars purchased in Revere covered?

Yes. Massachusetts is the only state with a true used-car lemon law. M.G.L. c. 90 section 7N1/4 requires any dealer (not just franchise dealers) selling a used vehicle for at least $700 with fewer than 125,000 miles to provide a tiered express warranty: 90 days or 3,750 miles under 40,000 miles at sale, 60 days or 2,500 miles between 40,000-79,999, and 30 days or 1,250 miles between 80,000-124,999. After three repair attempts or 10 business days out of service for the same substantial defect, the dealer must refund the purchase price minus $0.15 per mile driven. Private sales have a narrower 30-day implied warranty.

Stuck with a lemon in Revere?

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