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Texas Lemon Law Buyback Lookup

Texas Lemon Check by VIN — Catch the Buyback Before You Buy

Check any vehicle titled in Texas for a "Reacquired Vehicle" brand, lemon-law repurchase, or warranty return. Texas's lemon law covers eligible cars for 24 months / 24,000 mi. Free preview, no credit card, instant results sourced from NMVTIS and the Texas Department of Motor Vehicles.

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Enter any 17-character VIN — cars, trucks, SUVs, leased vehicles

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TX
Texas title records
NMVTIS
federally-sourced
< 5 sec
average lookup time
Free
preview, no signup
23.5M
vehicles registered

Texas Lemon Law at a Glance

Texas coverage window
24 months / 24,000 mi
Repair-attempt threshold
4 attempts (or 2 for safety) or 30 days
Used-car lemon protection
No
Buyback title brand used
Reacquired Vehicle

How Texas's Lemon Law Works

Texas Occupations Code § 2301.601 administered by the Texas Department of Motor Vehicles. Texas uses the term 'Reacquired Vehicle' and requires permanent title disclosure.

In Texas, the manufacturer generally gets 4 attempts (or 2 for safety) or 30 days to fix the same defect before the vehicle can qualify. That tracks the 30-day out-of-service standard used across most of the country.

Texas's lemon law applies to new vehicles only. If you are buying used in Texas, the practical protection comes from the original manufacturer warranty (if it is still active), the federal Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act, and a careful VIN history check before you sign.

When a Texas vehicle qualifies, the manufacturer must repurchase or replace it, and the title is branded as a "Reacquired Vehicle". A VIN-based lemon check pulls that brand from NMVTIS, the federal title system that gathers records from the Texas Department of Motor Vehicles and every other state DMV, so a buyback cannot quietly disappear by moving the car across state lines.

TexasBuyback & Disclosure Rules

When a manufacturer repurchases a vehicle in Texas, the buyback must be recorded on the title as a "Reacquired Vehicle" and disclosed to the next buyer in writing. That paper trail can still break down once a car crosses state lines, which is why the NMVTIS-sourced VIN record is the more reliable source.

Coverage & eligibility

  • Coverage window: 24 months / 24,000 mi
  • Repair threshold: 4 attempts (or 2 for safety) or 30 days
  • Used-car protection: No

Texas title office

  • Buyback brand term: Reacquired Vehicle
  • Texas Department of Motor Vehicles
  • 23.5M vehicles registered

Texas fact: Texas issues a separate 'Flood Damage' title brand for vehicles flooded by storms or hurricanes, including Hurricane Harvey-affected cars.

Red Flags a Texas Used Car Might Be a Hidden Lemon

No single flag is proof, but two or three together should prompt a full VIN lemon check and a pre-purchase inspection.

1

A "Reacquired Vehicle" notation that the seller skips over or cannot explain

2

Repeated Texas service tickets for the same defect inside the 24 months / 24,000 mi window

3

A short first-ownership period with the manufacturer's finance arm taking the car back

4

The car re-titled out of Texas within a few months of its first registration

5

Dealer-only auction history immediately after the original retail sale

6

An asking price well below comparable clean-title cars in the same trim

7

Listing photos that avoid the driver-side door jamb and title close-ups

8

A third-party warranty offered in place of manufacturer certified coverage

What a Texas Lemon Title Costs You

Even after the defect is repaired, the brand follows the VIN for life and carries real financial weight.

Resale value drops 15-40%

A "Reacquired Vehicle" brand is a permanent valuation discount. Most Texas retail buyers walk away once the brand is disclosed, and valuation guides apply a fixed deduction.

Insurance limits

Many carriers restrict branded-title cars to liability-only coverage and decline comprehensive or collision, the same way they treat salvage titles.

Financing limits

Prime lenders usually decline branded titles. Subprime financing exists in Texas but at higher APRs and lower loan-to-value ratios.

How to Lemon-Check a Car in Texas — 6 Steps

A full pre-purchase lemon screen takes about 15 minutes between your desk and the dealership.

01

Run the VIN

Enter the 17-character VIN above. We pull NMVTIS, DMV title records, and national auction data in under 5 seconds for any Texas vehicle.

02

Find the brand

Scan the title-history section for a "Reacquired Vehicle" record or any equivalent buyback or repurchase brand.

03

Check the window

Texas protection runs 24 months / 24,000 mi. See whether the defect history falls inside that period.

04

Pull service records

Count repair visits for the same defect. Texas's threshold is 4 attempts (or 2 for safety) or 30 days.

05

Verify with the DMV

Confirm the title status with the Texas Department of Motor Vehicles before money changes hands.

06

Get a PPI

Have an independent mechanic inspect the car and target any systems the VIN report flagged.

When Texas Lemon Law Runs Out: Federal Backstop

The Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act

Texas's lemon law is limited to the 24 months / 24,000 mi window. When that closes, or when you buy from a private party, the federal Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act (15 U.S.C. § 2301) can still help in three ways:

  • It creates a private cause of action for breach of any written or implied warranty, including powertrain and certified pre-owned warranties.
  • It allows recovery of reasonable attorneys' fees, which makes consumer claims economically viable.
  • It applies in Texas and all 50 states, filling gaps where the state lemon window has expired.

This summary is informational, not legal advice. Consult a qualified consumer-protection attorney about your situation.

Don't Buy a Texas Lemon by Mistake

Free, instant lemon check sourced from NMVTIS and the Texas Department of Motor Vehicles. No credit card. No signup.

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Lemon Law Checks in Other States

Lemon laws vary widely from one state to the next. Compare Texas with these other state guides, or see the full 50-state table.

Always check the VIN before you buy

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Texas Lemon Check FAQ

The most-searched questions about Texas's lemon law, buyback titles, and VIN-based lemon detection.

Does Texas's lemon law cover used cars?+

Texas's lemon law applies to new vehicles only. If you are buying used in Texas, the practical protection comes from the original manufacturer warranty (if it is still active), the federal Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act, and a careful VIN history check before you sign.

How many repair attempts make a car a lemon in Texas?+

Under Texas's lemon law, the threshold is 4 attempts (or 2 for safety) or 30 days for the same persistent defect. A single failed repair can sometimes be enough when the defect is a serious safety issue such as brakes or steering. Texas Occupations Code § 2301.601 administered by the Texas Department of Motor Vehicles. Texas uses the term 'Reacquired Vehicle' and requires permanent title disclosure.

How long does Texas's lemon law protection last?+

Texas covers eligible vehicles for 24 months / 24,000 mi. After that window closes you generally cannot file a new state lemon claim, though the federal Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act may still apply to defects that first appeared inside the warranty period.

What is a Texas lemon buyback title called?+

In Texas a repurchased lemon is branded as a "Reacquired Vehicle". When a manufacturer repurchases a vehicle in Texas, the buyback must be recorded on the title as a "Reacquired Vehicle" and disclosed to the next buyer in writing. That paper trail can still break down once a car crosses state lines, which is why the NMVTIS-sourced VIN record is the more reliable source.

How do I check if a used car is a lemon in Texas?+

Enter the 17-character VIN in the search box above. We query NMVTIS and national title sources for any buyback or repurchase brand, regardless of which state issued the current paper title. Because NMVTIS aggregates records from the Texas Department of Motor Vehicles and every other state DMV, a car that was branded in Texas and then re-titled elsewhere will still surface its history.

Are lemon buybacks required to be disclosed in Texas?+

When a manufacturer repurchases a vehicle in Texas, the buyback must be recorded on the title as a "Reacquired Vehicle" and disclosed to the next buyer in writing. That paper trail can still break down once a car crosses state lines, which is why the NMVTIS-sourced VIN record is the more reliable source.

What if the seller in Texas never told me the car was a buyback?+

If a Texas seller failed to disclose a known buyback brand, you may have a claim under the state's deceptive trade practices law, common-law fraud, or the federal Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act. Keep the title, the listing, and every repair record, and consult a qualified consumer-protection attorney. This page is informational, not legal advice.

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One VIN. Every Texas Lemon Brand. Five Seconds.

A "Reacquired Vehicle" record follows the VIN permanently, even when the paper title looks clean. Run the free check before you write a check.

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