Recurring infotainment / software issues on a Lincoln? California's Lemon Law may entitle you to a full refund or replacement — at no cost to you.
Get a Free Case ReviewIf your Lincoln is experiencing infotainment problems that your dealer has been unable to permanently fix, you may be entitled to a full repurchase, replacement vehicle, or cash settlement under California's Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act — widely regarded as the strongest lemon law in the United States.
Lincoln owners across California have successfully recovered the full purchase price of their vehicles after repeated failed repair attempts for infotainment defects. California law requires Lincoln to either repair the defect in a reasonable number of attempts or buy the vehicle back — and if the company refuses, it may owe you up to twice the purchase price as a civil penalty.
This page covers everything you need to know: what Lincoln infotainment defects qualify, how the lemon law process works, what compensation you can recover, and answers to the questions our clients ask most often. If you've already made multiple dealer visits for the same problem, you may already qualify — read on to find out.
Infotainment defects affect backup camera systems, navigation, phone integration, and driver assistance controls — all of which are safety-adjacent features whose failure can substantially impair a vehicle's value and use.
Under California's lemon law presumption, your Lincoln is presumed to be a lemon if, within 18 months or 18,000 miles from original delivery (whichever comes first), any of the following apply:
You do not need to satisfy all three criteria — any one of them is sufficient to trigger the presumption. And even if you fall short of these thresholds, you may still have a valid claim if the defect is serious enough or the manufacturer's response was unreasonable.
Lincoln models that have generated infotainment complaints in California include the Navigator, Corsair, Aviator, Nautilus, and MKZ. If you own one of these models and have returned to the dealer repeatedly for the same issue, your case deserves a professional evaluation.
Infotainment defects in Lincoln vehicles manifest in a variety of ways. The following are the most frequently reported issues by Lincoln owners who have pursued — and won — lemon law claims in California. If your vehicle shows any of these symptoms after multiple repair attempts, you likely have a strong claim.
A touchscreen that freezes, goes dark, or requires a full system restart to recover is one of the most common lemon law complaints in modern vehicles. When a dealer cannot permanently resolve it, the pattern of visits builds a strong claim.
A backup camera that blacks out, shows distorted images, or fails to activate is not just an inconvenience — federal law requires backup cameras on all new vehicles sold after May 2018, making their failure a safety defect.
GPS systems that repeatedly provide incorrect directions, lose satellite lock, or crash are a substantial impairment of a primary vehicle feature — especially when the issue persists after software updates.
Failure to pair with phones, dropped connections, or malfunctioning CarPlay/Android Auto integration affects hands-free communication — a safety feature — and has been the subject of many successful lemon law claims.
Speakers that stop working, audio that cuts out, or amplifiers that fail prematurely represent defects in a system that contributes significantly to the vehicle's perceived value.
An infotainment system that enters a reboot loop — cycling on and off repeatedly — can disrupt climate control, audio, and vehicle settings simultaneously, rendering the system useless.
Manufacturer-pushed over-the-air updates that brick the infotainment system or introduce new defects are repair attempts that have made the situation worse — a fact that weighs heavily in lemon law evaluations.
When a Lincoln owner reports a infotainment problem, dealers typically begin with the least invasive steps — diagnostic scans, software updates, fluid changes, or component cleaning — before escalating to part replacement or system overhaul. This incremental approach is common across the industry, but it often means the root cause goes unaddressed over multiple visits while the repair order count climbs.
Infotainment defects are frequently addressed through software updates. Keep records of every update applied to your vehicle — date, version, and whether it resolved or changed the issue. Updates that fail to resolve the defect count as repair attempts.
A critical point many Lincoln owners miss: every service visit counts as a repair attempt — including visits where the dealer documents "no fault found" or "unable to duplicate concern." Those visits still establish that you reported the problem and the manufacturer failed to resolve it. If you have three or four repair orders for the same complaint, your case may already meet the legal threshold.
Organize every repair order chronologically. Note the date, mileage, and the exact complaint you described each time. This paper trail is the backbone of your lemon law case and the first thing an attorney will review.
California's Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act applies to new and certain used vehicles purchased or leased in California that come with a manufacturer's express warranty. It requires manufacturers — including Lincoln — to repair defects that impair the vehicle's use, value, or safety. When those defects cannot be permanently repaired in a reasonable number of attempts, the manufacturer must either replace the vehicle or buy it back.
California's lemon law is significantly stronger than the federal Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act in several important respects:
The law applies to vehicles purchased for personal, family, or household use — including daily commuters. Commercial fleet vehicles are subject to different standards, but single business-use vehicles may still qualify. An attorney can evaluate your specific situation quickly and at no cost to you.
A successful lemon law claim against Lincoln can result in substantial financial recovery. California law provides three primary remedies:
Lincoln repurchases the vehicle and refunds: your down payment, all monthly payments made, registration and licensing fees, taxes, and incidental expenses (rental cars, towing, repair-related costs) — minus a mileage offset calculated from delivery date to first reported defect.
Lincoln provides a comparable new vehicle — same make, model, and trim level — at no net cost beyond the same mileage offset. Replacement vehicles come with a fresh warranty.
Many lemon law cases resolve with Lincoln paying a negotiated lump sum while you keep the vehicle. For owners who have grown accustomed to their car or cannot wait for a buyback process, this option often delivers immediate value.
Civil Penalty: If a court finds that Lincoln willfully refused to comply with its buyback obligation, California law allows the court to award up to two times the vehicle's purchase price as an additional civil penalty — on top of the buyback amount.
Attorney Fees: Under Song-Beverly, Lincoln must pay your reasonable attorney's fees and litigation costs if you prevail. This is what makes the California lemon law work for consumers: you pay nothing to pursue your claim.
If your Lincoln has a infotainment defect, the actions you take in the next few days can significantly affect the outcome of your claim. Here is what to do:
Time matters. California's lemon law has a 4-year statute of limitations from when you knew or should have known of the defect — but acting sooner means better documentation, fresher memories, and faster resolution.
Absolutely. Today's infotainment systems control backup cameras, climate, navigation, and phone connectivity — all of which affect safety and value. Courts have consistently held that persistent infotainment failures constitute substantial impairment.
Yes. Federal law mandates functioning backup cameras on all vehicles sold after May 2018. A backup camera that consistently fails is a safety defect, lowering the repair-attempt threshold under California law.
Yes. Every software update — whether applied at the dealer or pushed over-the-air — counts as a repair attempt if it was intended to address a known defect. If the update doesn't fix the problem, you have another failed attempt on your record.
CarPlay and Android Auto failures affect hands-free calling and navigation — both safety-adjacent features. Persistent connectivity failures that the dealer cannot resolve support a lemon law claim, particularly when multiple visits document the same complaint.
Document the condition immediately with photos and video, then take the vehicle to the dealer the same day. A screen that has gone completely dark affects your backup camera and vehicle controls — treat it as an urgent safety issue.
Yes. California's lemon law covers substantial impairment of value, not just safety. An infotainment system that constantly malfunctions reduces the vehicle's resale value and enjoyment — both of which qualify under Song-Beverly.
Our California lemon law attorneys have recovered millions for owners of defective vehicles across every major make. If your Lincoln has a infotainment defect your dealer cannot fix, you may be entitled to a full repurchase — and Lincoln pays our fees.
Start My Free Case Review →California lemon law covers all major defect categories — not just infotainment. If your Lincoln has experienced other recurring issues, explore our make-specific pages below.
Infotainment defects occur across all major vehicle brands. Select your manufacturer below to see make-specific information about infotainment lemon law claims in California.
ELECTRICAL SYSTEM,SEAT BELTS,SEATS
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Upon starting, my 2023 Lincoln Navigator Reserve L has a significant delay when booting the back up camera and infotainment system and renders the vehicle safety systems unusable. Sometimes the back up camera freezes and locks the screen, sometimes it doesn't turn on at all. Often, the infotainment …
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