- Extended warranty
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An extended warranty, sometimes called a service agreement, a service contract, or a maintenance agreement, is a prolonged warranty offered to consumers. The extended warranty may be offered by the warranty administrator, the retailer or the manufacturer. Extended warranties cost extra and for a percentage of the item's retail price. Occasionally, some extended warranties that are purchased for multiple years state in writing that during the first year, the consumer must still deal with the manufacturer in the occurrence of malfunction. Thus, what is often promoted as a five-year extended guarantee is actually only a four-year guarantee.
Contents
Overview
An extended warranty is coverage for electrical or mechanical breakdown. It may or may not cover peripheral items, wear and tear, damage by computer viruses, re-gassing, normal maintenance, accidental damage, or any consequential loss.[1] Most state insurance regulators have approved the inclusion of normal wear and tear, accidental damage from handling, rental car and towing, power surge and other coverages in addition to the standard coverage for defects in materials and workmanship. The indemnity is to cover the cost of repair and may include replacement if deemed uneconomic to repair. It is important for consumers to read and understand the terms and conditions offered at the point of sale.
Extended Auto Warranty
An extended auto warranty is a service contract between the owner of a vehicle and an auto warranty provider. All new cars come with a warranty that cover repairs for a certain period of time and a certain number of miles, such as 3 years and 36,000 miles. When that time period runs out, consumers have the option to purchase an extended auto warranty. This warranty is not an extension of the terms and coverages provided in the original car manufacturer’s warranty. Rather, it is a new contract provided a third-party provider.[2]
Canadian province of Québec
Based upon the Québec civil code and the Loi sur la protection du consommateur every merchant is responsible to uphold the legal guarantee of a product. This legal guarantee protects the consumer from: purposefully hidden malfunctions, defaults that could not be readily identified at the moment of purchase, the guarantee that the item purchased can be used for its stated uses and finally guarantees a reasonable life expectancy based on the price paid. This guarantee survives even when the initial purchaser sells his goods to another person. A merchant cannot ask a consumer to pay any fees or shipping charges in order to be eligible to receive their legal guarantee. The office for the protection of consumers does not take a particular stance towards extended warranties. However, they recommend that consumers should be vigilant and question themselves whether the warranty really adds anything to the already applicable legal warranty. Finally they point out that the number of consumers who go to court against merchants in order for them to apply the legal warranty is almost proportional to the number of consumers who take legal means against a merchant for failing to respect extended warranties they have sold.[3]
By region
United States
In the United States, extended warranty's are regulated by many state insurance commissioners as "service contracts." Service contracts can cover automobiles, consumer goods (such as appliances, electronics, lawn equipment, etc...) and homes. The regulatory structure requires licensure or registration of the warranty providers, financial solvency regulation, and service contract consumer disclosures. Service warranty "providers" apply for licensure or registration, and then may sell their products, usually at the point of sale of the product, for example at the car dealership, or at the retail consumer electronics store. In the United States, a type of extended warranty called vehicle service contracts are typically regulated by the states as insurance. In July 2010, California issued a cease and desist letter to several corporations which were selling the insurance illegally in the state; the corporations contended that it was not insurance because the contracts required that certain additives be used.[4]
United Kingdom
The extended warranty market has been subject to several investigations. In 2002 the Office of Fair Trading decided that self-regulation of the industry had failed and passed the case onto the Competition Commission. This concluded that the market was not acting in the interests of consumers. The Citizens Advice Bureau have expressed concerns about extended warranties being mis-sold.[5]
See also
- Warranty
- Extended service plan
References
- ^ Scelfo, Julie (2009-05-28). "Should You Buy an Extended Warranty?". The New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/28/garden/28repairside.html. Retrieved 2010-03-27.
- ^ "Car Buying Tips". Car Buying Tips. http://www.carbuyingtips.com/warranty.htm. Retrieved 15 June 2011.
- ^ Office de la protection du consommateur[dead link]
- ^ Commissioner Poizner Orders Vehicle Warranty Company to End Illegal Telemarketing, Stop Operating as Unlicensed Insurance Company. California Department of Insurance.
- ^ Elise Cross (2010-02-24). "New protection for consumers taking out extended warranties welcomed - but many offer little value for money says Citizens Advice". Citizensadvice.org.uk. http://www.citizensadvice.org.uk/index/pressoffice/press_index/press-050407.htm. Retrieved 2010-03-01.[dead link]
External links
Categories:- Contract law
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