i30 Owners Club
GENERAL STUFF => GENERAL DISCUSSIONS => Car Related (any make, any model) => Topic started by: Heebie on February 09, 2025, 05:22:52
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Newb to the forum. Has anyone had luck with warranty from Hyundai on grounds of good faith? We are 40k in on a 2019 and this thing is causing all manner of grief mechanically and financially.
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Warranties are voluntary and are additional to consumer guarantees. Hyundai cannot take away your consumer rights under Australian Consumer Law. There is no set warranty period.
After the warranty expires, the consumer guarantee of acceptable quality usually still applies. This means that if there’s a problem with a product, the consumer likely still has a right to a repair, refund or replacement, even after the warranty period.
"In addition to consumer guarantee rights, businesses can offer warranties.
Warranties can’t replace, change or take away a consumer’s basic rights. These basic rights can last longer than a business’s warranty.
A warranty is a voluntary promise that a person or business makes when selling a product or service. Once the consumer buys the product or service, the warranty becomes a legal right. Businesses must comply with any warranties they have provided.
The terms and conditions of a warranty may require the consumer to do certain things in order to keep the warranty."