Hyundai Extends Warranties For More Than 1.21 Million Vehicles

Hyundai Extends Warranties For More Than 1.21 Million Vehicles

Hyundai has announced it will extend the warranties for more than 1.21 million vehicles worldwide to support owners who may encounter difficulties in having their vehicles serviced and repaired during the Covid-19 pandemic.

In the U.S., the South Korean car manufacturer says owners with a 5-year/60,000-mile new vehicle limited warranty or a 10-year/100,000-mile powertrain warranty set to expire between March and June 2020 will have their warranty coverage extended to June 30, 2020. Hyundai will contact all eligible customers in the coming days.


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MDarringerMDarringer - 4/6/2020 12:06:36 PM
-2 Boost
So is June 20 the day that imprisonment is over?



momentofsurrendermomentofsurrender - 4/6/2020 1:53:42 PM
+5 Boost
Seems like Hyundai/Kia are leaders in the industry right now. Great warranties, good products, nice styling, value and innovation and they did not have to extend the warranty. Are any other companies doing this?


xjug1987axjug1987a - 4/6/2020 3:18:14 PM
+1 Boost
Bulls Eye... they're attracting customers from every angle: cost/value, interiors, technology, design, economy and clearly warranty... I predict there is a Korean vehicle in most of our futures... NEVER thought I'd say that...


F1_DriverF1_Driver - 4/7/2020 12:42:18 AM
+1 Boost
Sorry, the only customers the Korean auto makers are attracting are low income people and subprime borrowers. Seriously, who in their right mind would choose Korean over German or Japanese for that matter? Just ask yourself this question, if a MB S class cost the same as a Genesis G90, which car would you choose?


MDarringerMDarringer - 4/7/2020 11:39:21 AM
-1 Boost
@F1_Driver what a bigoted pig you are!


F1_DriverF1_Driver - 4/7/2020 7:47:59 PM
+1 Boost
MDarringer, you know it's true. You're just afraid to say it. There, I said it on your behalf. You're welcome.


cidflekkencidflekken - 4/6/2020 10:02:36 PM
+2 Boost
Nice PR move. Don't get me wrong, it's a good move. But Do they really expect anything to happen to cars when people can't really drive them anyway?


MDarringerMDarringer - 4/7/2020 11:38:45 AM
0 Boost
People CAN drive and people ARE driving. The stay-at-home order is not legally enforceable and lawsuits are starting to fly because it is a violation of a person's constitutional rights.


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