AI Dispute Engine

Warranty Fraud · Home Appliances

Did a home appliances deny your warranty because denying your warranty because you used a non-OEM replacement part in your appliance?

Force them to honor your coverage under federal law.

Home Appliancess routinely lie and claim that denying your warranty because you used a non-OEM replacement part in your appliance automatically voids your warranty. Under the Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act, this is completely illegal. Use our AI engine to generate an ironclad statutory demand letter citing federal law to force the company to authorize your repairs immediately.

Your consumer rights

Service advisors and warranty departments rely on intimidation, hoping you will just pay out of pocket rather than challenge them. Here is the exact federal leverage you hold to bypass the frontline denial and force the company's hand.

Federal statute — Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act (15 U.S.C. § 2301)

The Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act prohibits appliance manufacturers from voiding warranties because you used a third-party replacement part, provided the part is functionally equivalent and properly installed. This is the same 'tie-in sales' ban that protects car owners.

Why this denial is illegal

Manufacturers often claim that only their branded $80 water filter or $200 drum bearing preserves the warranty. Federal law says otherwise. They must prove the aftermarket part directly caused the failure — not simply deny the claim because it was not their brand.

Remedy

Authorization of the warranty repair, reimbursement for out-of-pocket expenses caused by the wrongful denial, and written confirmation that equivalent aftermarket parts do not void the warranty.

Evidence to lock in your appeal

Save the aftermarket part receipt and specifications, the manufacturer's denial letter, your appliance purchase receipt, and any documentation showing the defect is unrelated to the aftermarket part (e.g., a compressor failure has nothing to do with a third-party water filter).

Crucial tactic: Never argue with the frontline service advisor or phone rep. They do not have the authority to override a system denial. This generated demand letter is designed to be sent directly to the company's General Manager, Corporate Customer Care executive team, or warranty dispute department to trigger an immediate compliance review.

How to reverse the denial today

STEP 1
Input the repair details
Tell our AI the make and model of your home appliances, the specific repair needed, and the exact excuse the company gave for denying the claim.
STEP 2
Instant statute mapping
The engine drafts a formal, aggressive dispute mapping the company's excuse directly to violations under the Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act and FTC regulations.
STEP 3
Deploy the notice
Download your professional PDF. Email it to the company's General Manager and corporate warranty dispute department to trigger an immediate compliance review.
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Consumer

Warranty Claim Denial

Question 1 of 714%

The person, company, or agency this letter is addressed to.

Cites Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act

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June 1, 2026

[recipient name]
[recipient address]

Re: Warranty Claim — Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act (15 U.S.C. § 2301 et seq.)

To Warranty Department:

I am asserting my rights under the express warranty covering the following product:

[product]

Facts:
[facts]

Requested resolution:
[desired outcome]

Failure to honor the warranty in good faith may give rise to a claim under the Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act, including attorneys' fees. Please respond in writing within fourteen (14) days.

Sincerely,

[user full name]
[user address]
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