ClaimGap
$39 flat fee · one-time

Generate your warranty demand package

Preview is free. You only see a checkout button if we find Mag-Moss or state lemon-law grounds.

Five short sections. We run the manufacturer's denial against the pretextual-denial playbook, count your repair attempts per your state's lemon-law rule, and cite the federal Magnuson-Moss fee-shifting remedy under 15 U.S.C. §2310(d)(2) verbatim.

About five minutesFederal Mag-Moss + state lemon-law overlayVerbatim statutory citations, no dollar demands

Skip typing — upload your manufacturer denial letter

Drop the PDF once and we'll pre-fill every field for you. You can still correct anything before paying. Works with most manufacturer denials and dealer/shop repair invoices.

You'll need: Manufacturer's denial letter

Don't have the documents handy? Skip this step — the intake form below works on its own.

1. About you

The letter is sent in your name. Put exactly what you want the manufacturer to see.

2. The product

Identify the item the warranty covered. For vehicles, the VIN identifies the specific unit; for everything else, the serial number on the product label or box.

Category
Warranty tier (optional — defaults to “Limited”)

Magnuson-Moss §2303 distinguishes “full” vs “limited” written warranties. If the warranty card doesn't say “FULL” on it, it's almost certainly a limited warranty — the default below fits >95% of consumer products.

3. Repair attempts (optional but strongly recommended)

Why we ask: most state lemon laws trigger after roughly 3-4 unsuccessful repair attempts for the same nonconformity, OR once the product has been out of service for about 30 cumulative days. Your state's specific threshold is applied server-side.

No repair attempts logged yet. Add one if the manufacturer or service center has tried to fix the issue.

4. The denial (optional but strongly recommended)

Paste the full denial text from the manufacturer's letter or email. We run it against the pretextual-denial playbook (user-damage without cause, aftermarket-parts tie-in, “normal wear” on non-wear components, etc.) and cite the specific Mag-Moss subsection the denial breaches.

5. Additional context (optional)