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As long as you have a warranty, then yes you can return an unsafe used car to the dealer. However, without a warranty, it will be impossible.
Some dealers offer a warranty but most do not. If there is no warranty written down there is no warranty at all.
The Texas "lemon law" does not apply or include used cars. You buy it as is with no warranties expressed or implied unless your contract with the dealer includes any repair clauses. You did read ALL the fine print before you signed?The exception to this would be if the used car was new enough to still be covered by the manufacturers warranty, but not any extended warranty.
unless you have a written and signed warranty, used cars are sold AS IS and there is no expressed warranty on a used vehicle
Dealer is selling you the car AS-IS. They are then selling you a service contract from a different company thus the dealer is not the one providing a warranty the service contract provider is the one providing a warranty.
Used cars are usually sold AS IS or with a 3 month Warranty. If your car came with a warranty, bring it to the attention of the Dealer. If the dealer refuses to replace your tires or provide you compensation for dry rotted tires, sue them in Small Claims court. If your car was sold AS IS with not warranty, you can still talk to the dealer about replacing the tires, but if the dealer refuses, you have no legal recourse. Moral of the Story: Always get a used car examined by a Mechanic prior to purchase.
Sure, buying used machinery from a dealer or outlet means you normally get a warranty and if you pay more they may offer to extend it.
Texas does not have a used car lemon law. If you buy a car "AS IS" know that you have no warranty at all. The buyers remorse law does not apply to the purchase of a new or used vehicle. If the car is sold with a warranty, typically the warranty covers the power-train for a set time and or mileage. The warranty may only cover 50% of the repairs. Read the warranty to see what it covers and for how much.
When a person purchases a used vehicle with an extended warranty and the extended warranty gets rejected the person should contact the dealer that sold the vehicle. The person can also contact the warranty company and inquire as to why it was rejected.
The warranty on a new automobile is from the manufacturer, not the dealer. It does not matter where the car is purchased. A used vehicle, on the other hand, can have very different warranties depending on the dealer.
The warranty covers what it covers. Not all warranties are the same. Read the fine print to see what it covers.
Highly unlikely, but you can ask the selling dealer. Brake pads are wear items and are almost never covered by a used car warranty. But the dealer may replace them at 100% cost or share the cost with you 50-50. Read the warranty to be sure.