The Connecticut lemon law sets out the following amounts that a manufacturer must pay when it repurchases a motor vehicle under the lemon law:
- The full contract price of the vehicle, including but not limited to charges for undercoating, dealer preparation and transportation, and installed options;
- All collateral charges, including but not limited to sales tax, license and registration fees, and similar government charges;
- All finance charges incurred by the consumer after the consumer first reports the nonconformity to the manufacturer, agent or dealer and during any subsequent period when the vehicle is out of service by reason of repair; [Although the lemon law limits the award of finance charges to periods when the vehicle is out of service due to repair, the Office of the Attorney General has interpreted other lemon law provisions as permitting the refund of all earned finance charges.]
- Incidental damages directly caused by the vehicle’s nonconformity, including reasonably incurred charges for alternate transportation, towing, and lodging.
Refunds must be made to the consumer, lessor and lienholder, if any, as their interests may appear.
The Connecticut lemon law provides that a reasonable allowance for the consumer’s use of the motor vehicle be subtracted from the repurchase amounts. The reasonable allowance for use is calculated in accordance with the following formula:
reasonable allowance for use = # miles vehicle traveled attributable to use by the consumer before the manufacturer’s acceptance of its return X total contract price ————————————– 120,000 [Note that BBB AUTO LINE arbitrators may use the mileage at the time of the hearing in this formula instead of the mileage at the time of the manufacturer’s acceptance of the vehicle’s return.]