If you brought your vehicle to the dealership because something was clearly wrong, and the service department handed it back with the words “no problem found”, you are not alone. This is one of the most frustrating parts of a California lemon law case. You know the problem is real. The car is hesitating, stalling, jerking, failing to start, losing power, making noise, or showing warning lights. But the dealership says it could not duplicate the issue or did not confirm a repairable defect.
That kind of response does not automatically end your California lemon law rights. In many cases, it is part of the pattern that helps show the vehicle has an ongoing defect that the manufacturer has not successfully fixed. What matters is not just what the dealer says one time. What matters is the broader record: your complaints, repair visits, symptoms, downtime, and whether the manufacturer had a reasonable opportunity to repair the problem.
Some vehicle problems are easy to verify. Others are intermittent. A warning light may disappear before the technician sees it. A transmission issue may only show up after the car warms up. An electrical defect may happen randomly. A software issue may reset itself. In other cases, the dealer may not spend enough time testing the condition, may not follow the same driving pattern you experienced, or may simply document the visit in a way that minimizes the problem.
That is why “no problem found” does not necessarily mean there is no defect. It often means the problem was not confirmed during that specific inspection. For a consumer, that distinction matters a lot.
It can. Under California lemon law, the key issue is whether the manufacturer or its authorized repair facility had a reasonable number of opportunities to repair a defect covered by warranty. A repair visit may still matter even if the invoice says “could not duplicate concern” or “no problem found,” especially if:
In other words, a manufacturer should not get a free pass just because the problem is intermittent or difficult to recreate on command.
If the issue comes back, return to the dealer and report it again. A repeated pattern of the same unresolved problem is often more important than any one repair order.
Do not just say the car “feels wrong.” Describe what happens, when it happens, how often it happens, whether warning lights come on, whether the issue affects driving or safety, and whether passengers observed it too.
The paperwork matters. Even a frustrating invoice that says “no problem found” may still help show that you repeatedly reported the defect while the vehicle was under warranty.
Write down dates, mileage, what you experienced, who was in the car, and what the dealership said. If the symptom happens again after service, note that too.
If the problem can be recorded safely, that may help support your position later. Videos of warning lights, rough idling, startup failure, or display-system malfunctions can be useful context.
Consumers often hear “no problem found” in cases involving:
Those problems may still support a claim if the history shows repeated unsuccessful repair opportunities and a real impact on the vehicle’s use, value, or safety.
Yes, potentially. California lemon law does not require the dealership to use the exact words you want on the invoice. It focuses more on whether the manufacturer failed to repair a warranty-covered defect within a reasonable number of opportunities.
That means a valid case may still exist if your records show:
Manufacturers often defend these cases by arguing there was no confirmed defect, no substantial impairment, or not enough repair attempts. Good documentation helps push back against that. The more clearly the record shows the same issue being reported again and again, the harder it is to dismiss the pattern as a one-time inconvenience.
This is also why people should be careful about waiting too long, accepting vague explanations, or failing to keep copies of repair orders. When the paperwork is thin, proving the full pattern becomes harder.
If you keep returning to the dealer for the same problem and the answer is always some version of “no issue found,” “could not duplicate,” or “operating as designed,” it may be time to get the case reviewed. That is especially true if the issue affects reliability, safety, drivability, or your confidence in the vehicle.
A lemon law attorney can review the repair history, identify whether the pattern is strong enough to pursue, and help you understand the next step without guessing.
When a dealer says “no problem found,” that can feel like the end of the road. In reality, it may be the beginning of the record that proves the problem was never truly fixed. A failed confirmation is not the same as a resolved defect. If the issue keeps happening, the history matters — and so does what you do next.
If your vehicle keeps showing the same problem and the dealership keeps sending you away without a real fix, ANTN Law can review the repair history and help you understand whether you may still have a California lemon law claim.
If your car keeps going back for the same issue and the dealer keeps saying the problem could not be found or fixed, ANTN Law may be able to review the repair history and help you understand your next step.
For broader guidance, see our main Lemon Law page and our related article on how to file a Lemon Law claim in California.