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Brazos County

Bryan Lemon Law

Drivers in Bryan are covered by the Texas Lemon Law (Tex. Occ. Code Ann. §§ 2301.601–2301.613). 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 Bryan cases are filed

Texas Department of Motor Vehicles, Enforcement Division (Lemon Law Section)

4000 Jackson Avenue, Austin, TX 78731

https://www.txdmv.gov/motorists/consumer-protection/lemon-law →

Why local conditions matter

How Bryan's driving environment affects vehicle reliability

Bryan sits in the Brazos Valley with hot, humid summers regularly exceeding 100F, mild winters with rare ice storms, and frequent severe-thunderstorm and hail events in spring. Vehicles face prolonged heat-soak combined with Texas A&M student-driver commuter volume and periodic flash-flood exposure along Carter Creek and the Navasota River.

Major routes:  SH-6 (Earl Rudder Freeway) · SH-21 · FM-2818 (Harvey Mitchell Parkway) · Loop 1179 (Texas Avenue / Briarcrest) · FM-60 (University Drive)

HVAC and A/C compressor failures

Brazos Valley summers force air-conditioning systems to run at near-peak load for five to six months a year, accelerating compressor clutch wear, evaporator leaks, and blend-door actuator failures that produce repeat warranty visits often satisfying the TxDMV four-attempt threshold during the 24-month coverage window.

Hail-related ADAS recalibration faults

Brazos County sits in central Texas hail alley, and severe-thunderstorm hail routinely damages windshields, sunroofs, and roof-mounted sensors, triggering forward-camera, radar, and lane-keep fault codes that owners often chase across multiple dealer visits before the manufacturer can clear the codes permanently.

Battery and 12V electrical degradation

Sustained heat-soak combined with intermittent student-driver short-trip usage patterns around Texas A&M stresses both conventional and EV auxiliary batteries, producing repeat no-start, parasitic-drain, and start/stop-system fault complaints that build the Texas four-repair record.

Flood-water intrusion electrical faults

Recurring spring storms produce flash flooding along Carter Creek and FM-2818 underpasses that periodically submerges vehicles or splashes water into door seals and floor-pan harnesses, producing intermittent ECU, body-control-module, and infotainment fault codes that warrant repeated dealer diagnosis throughout the warranty period.

Dealership clusters

Bryan-College Station's franchised new-car dealerships cluster along the SH-6 (Earl Rudder Freeway) corridor between Bryan and College Station, with the heaviest concentration along the SH-6 frontage and along Texas Avenue (Business 6) through Bryan. Additional dealers sit along Briarcrest Drive on the north side. Many Brazos County buyers also drive 90 minutes to the Houston-area dealer rings along US-290 or to Austin for inventory not stocked locally, so a typical Bryan lemon-law file includes warranty repair orders from service departments across multiple Central Texas markets.

Brands we see most

Brazos Valley buyers skew heavily toward Ford F-Series, Chevrolet Silverado, and Ram pickups for ranch and agricultural use, with strong Toyota Tundra/Tacoma volume. Texas A&M faculty, staff, and parent-buyer households add steady Toyota, Honda, Subaru, and Lexus crossover volume, with Tesla and EV adoption growing among the university tech community.

Areas served around Bryan

  • Downtown Bryan
  • Midtown
  • Travis
  • Briarcrest
  • Bonham
  • Edge

Your rights under Texas law

Texas Lemon Law

Texas Lemon Law (Tex. Occ. Code Ann. §§ 2301.601–2301.613) gives Texas 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 Texas lemon law guide →

Common questions

Lemon law in Bryan, TX

Where do I file a Texas Lemon Law claim if I live in Bryan?

Texas Lemon Law claims are not filed in court — they are filed administratively with the Texas Department of Motor Vehicles, Enforcement Division (Lemon Law Section) in Austin. Bryan residents submit the complaint and $35 filing fee through the TxDMV online portal, after which a case examiner schedules mediation and, if needed, an administrative hearing. Hearings are typically held at TxDMV offices in Austin or by video conference. A final TxDMV order may be appealed to a Travis County or Brazos County district court, but the agency proceeding has to come first under Tex. Occ. Code § 2301.604.

How many repair attempts trigger the Texas Lemon Law in Brazos County?

Texas applies three statutory tests, all measured during the first 24 months or 24,000 miles. The four-times test is met when the same defect has been the subject of four or more repair attempts and the problem persists. The serious-safety-hazard test is met when a life-threatening defect has been the subject of two or more attempts and continues. The 30-day test is met when the vehicle has been out of service for warranty repair for a cumulative 30 or more days, with at least two attempts in the first 12 months or 12,000 miles. Keep every Bryan-College Station-area repair order to prove dates and mileages.

What is the filing deadline for a Texas Lemon Law case?

Texas has one of the shortest lemon-law deadlines in the country. Under Tex. Occ. Code § 2301.606, a complaint must be filed with TxDMV within six months following the earliest of (a) the express warranty's expiration, (b) 24 months from delivery, or (c) the date your odometer reaches 24,000 miles. Missing this six-month window forfeits the TxDMV remedy. Separate claims under the federal Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act or the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act follow longer limitations periods but must be filed in court rather than at TxDMV.

I bought my car for my Texas A&M student — can the parent or student file?

The Texas Lemon Law allows the 'consumer' — the person to whom the vehicle was sold or leased — to file the TxDMV complaint, plus any subsequent transferee while the warranty is still in force. If a parent purchased the vehicle and titled it in the student's name, both may have standing depending on the title and finance paperwork. If the parent is the titled owner with the student as a permitted driver, the parent is the consumer for TxDMV purposes. Whoever files should attach the title, registration, and finance documents proving ownership and standing.

Are leased vehicles covered if I leased through a Bryan-area dealer?

Yes. Leased vehicles are covered to the same extent as purchased vehicles, and lessees can file Lemon Law complaints directly with TxDMV. If TxDMV orders a repurchase, it terminates the lease and apportions the refund — including a reasonable allowance for your use — between you, the lessor, and any lienholder. The refund covers your down payment, monthly payments made, and other lease charges. You still must satisfy one of the three repair tests, give written notice to the manufacturer, and file within the six-month deadline measured from the earliest of warranty expiration, 24 months, or 24,000 miles.

Do I have to give the manufacturer written notice before filing?

Yes. Tex. Occ. Code § 2301.606 requires the manufacturer to receive written notice of the defect and at least one opportunity to cure before TxDMV can find a violation. Bryan owners typically send the notice by certified mail to the manufacturer's customer-assistance address listed in the owner's manual, copied to the selling dealer. Keep proof of mailing. If the manufacturer fails to fix the vehicle after that final attempt, you can then file the TxDMV complaint, attach the certified-mail receipt, and proceed to mediation under TxDMV procedures.

What relief can a TxDMV examiner order?

If TxDMV rules in your favor, the manufacturer must repurchase the vehicle (refunding the full purchase price including sales tax, title, and registration, less a reasonable allowance for your use under 43 Tex. Admin. Code Ch. 215), replace it with a comparable vehicle, or perform additional repair if the defect can still be cured. TxDMV may also order reimbursement of incidental expenses caused by the defect. The Lemon Law itself does not authorize treble or punitive damages — consumers seeking those typically add a Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act claim or a federal Magnuson-Moss claim that allows attorney's fees.

Stuck with a lemon in Bryan?

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