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Anoka County

Blaine Lemon Law

Drivers in Blaine are covered by the Minnesota New Motor Vehicle Warranties Act (Lemon Law) (Minn. Stat. § 325F.665 (new vehicles); Minn. Stat. § 325F.662 (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 Blaine cases are filed

Anoka County District Court — Courthouse

325 East Main Street, Anoka, MN 55303

https://www.mncourts.gov/Find-Courts/Anoka.aspx →

Why local conditions matter

How Blaine's driving environment affects vehicle reliability

Blaine's north-metro commuter profile features long I-35W and US-10 commutes into Minneapolis and St. Paul, sub-zero winter stretches, and heavy salt use that corrode underbody components. Significant pickup share serves the north-metro construction corridor, exposing transmission and diesel emissions defects within the warranty window.

Major routes:  I-35W · I-35E · US-10 · MN-65 (Central Avenue) · County Road 14

I-35W long-commute transmission shudder

Daily I-35W commutes from Blaine through the Northtown interchange into downtown Minneapolis combine sustained highway loads with stop-and-go congestion, producing torque-converter shudder and clutch-pack wear in 8/9/10-speed automatics and CVTs that recurs after repeated dealer reflashes within the 24-month coverage window.

Cold-weather no-start and battery degradation

Anoka County's deep-cold January stretches load 12V starting systems, starter motors, and hybrid/EV battery management modules in unheated suburban driveways harder than mild climates, exposing weak batteries and DC-DC converter failures that recur after replacement within the 24-month coverage window.

Salt-belt brake-line and fuel-line corrosion

Anoka County's winter chloride program on I-35W, US-10, and MN-65 attacks brake hardlines, fuel lines, and rear subframe welds at a rate manufacturers building for milder climates do not warrant against, producing leak and corrosion repair orders within the 24-month coverage window.

Diesel emissions and DPF regeneration faults

Blaine's significant diesel pickup share serving north-metro contractors combined with cold-weather short-trip duty cycles produces repeated DEF system, DPF regeneration, and SCR catalyst faults that recur within the 24-month coverage window despite dealer reflashes.

Dealership clusters

Blaine's franchised new-car dealers cluster along the MN-65 (Central Avenue) corridor between 109th Avenue and 125th Avenue, with secondary stores at the Northtown interchange along I-35W and US-10. Used independent lots line University Avenue and County Road 10 in nearby Coon Rapids. Most warranty repair work for north-metro consumers is performed at the MN-65 corridor cluster.

Brands we see most

Blaine skews toward family-oriented Toyota Highlander, Honda Pilot, Subaru Ascent and Outback, and Ford Explorer crossovers, with strong pickup share — Ford F-150 and F-250, Ram 1500 and 2500, Chevy Silverado — driven by north-metro contractor use. Diesel pickup ownership is significant, surfacing recurring DEF and DPF complaints.

Areas served around Blaine

  • The Lakes
  • Lexington
  • Tom Thumb area
  • Sunset
  • Roosevelt
  • Pleasure Creek
  • Aquila
  • Northwest Blaine

Your rights under Minnesota law

Minnesota New Motor Vehicle Warranties Act (Lemon Law)

Minnesota New Motor Vehicle Warranties Act (Lemon Law) (Minn. Stat. § 325F.665 (new vehicles); Minn. Stat. § 325F.662 (used vehicles)) gives Minnesota drivers the right to a refund, replacement, or cash settlement when the manufacturer can't fix a substantial defect. The threshold is 4 repair attempts or 30 cumulative days out of service, within 24 months of delivery.

Full Minnesota lemon law guide →

Common questions

Lemon law in Blaine, MN

Where do Blaine lemon law cases get filed?

Blaine sits in Anoka County, so most consumer lemon law suits are filed in Anoka County District Court at the Anoka County Courthouse, 325 East Main Street in Anoka. Under Minn. Stat. § 325F.665 the action proceeds in state district court, with venue proper where you live, where the dealer operates, or where the manufacturer does business. You may also file a complaint with the Minnesota Attorney General's Consumer Protection Division, which administers the Lemon Law and accepts complaints from anywhere in the state.

How many repair attempts before I can file in Blaine?

Under Minn. Stat. § 325F.665, subd. 3 the manufacturer is presumed to have had a reasonable number of attempts after the same nonconformity has been subject to repair four or more times, the vehicle has been out of service a cumulative 30 or more business days for warranty work, or after just one attempt for a steering or brake defect likely to cause death or serious bodily injury. Each visit must occur during the express warranty or within two years of delivery, whichever expires first. Save every dealer repair order with the date, complaint description, mileage, and days held.

Are diesel pickup emissions defects covered in Blaine?

Yes. Repeated failures of DEF systems, DPF regeneration, SCR catalysts, or related emissions hardware that put the vehicle into reduced power or no-start derate qualify as substantial impairment of use under Minn. Stat. § 325F.665, particularly common in north-metro contractor diesel pickups. Each visit for the same emissions fault counts toward the four-repair presumption, and cumulative dealer days count toward the 30-business-day threshold. Federal Magnuson-Moss claims often add leverage where the emissions warranty extends beyond the basic bumper-to-bumper coverage.

What recovery is available in a Blaine lemon law case?

Either a comparable replacement vehicle or a full refund of the purchase price plus collateral charges (sales tax, license fees, towing, and rental costs), at your election (Minn. Stat. § 325F.665, subd. 3). The only deduction is a use allowance capped at the lesser of 10 cents per mile driven or 10 percent of the price. Reasonable attorney's fees, costs, and disbursements are paid by the manufacturer on top of the recovery, so the full refund goes to you. Lease buybacks return every dollar paid into the lease less the same capped use allowance.

Do I have to arbitrate before suing in Anoka County?

Only if the manufacturer's informal dispute settlement program has been certified by the Minnesota Attorney General as substantially complying with FTC Rule 16 C.F.R. Part 703. The AG actively refuses certification for noncompliant programs, so for many automakers you can sue directly in Anoka County District Court. Even where arbitration is required, the decision is not binding on you and you have six months to file suit afterward. Treble damages apply if the manufacturer appeals an award and fails to obtain a better result.

What if I bought my Blaine vehicle used?

If the used vehicle is still within the original manufacturer's express warranty it gets full Lemon Law coverage under Minn. Stat. § 325F.665. Otherwise Minnesota's used-car warranty law, Minn. Stat. § 325F.662, applies: licensed dealers must provide statutory written warranties of 60 days/2,500 miles for vehicles under 36,000 miles, 30 days/1,000 miles between 36,000 and 75,000 miles, and 15 days/500 miles between 75,000 and 125,000 miles (non-franchise dealers only). Vehicles priced under $3,000, over eight model years old, salvage-titled, or over 9,000 lbs GVW are excluded.

How long do I have to file in Blaine?

Three years from original delivery of the vehicle to the first consumer (Minn. Stat. § 325F.665, subd. 9). The defect itself must have been first reported during the manufacturer's express warranty or within two years of delivery, whichever expired first. Certified arbitration adds up to six months to the deadline from the date of the final decision. Federal Magnuson-Moss claims have a four-year statute under Minnesota's UCC and are commonly pled alongside the state Lemon Law claim, which can extend the filing window where the state deadline is close.

Stuck with a lemon in Blaine?

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