Essentially, nothing is covered. I bought an extended warranty for a truck I bought years ago (never again) and the water pump went out.Be sure to read the fine print and find out what's NOT covered.
I got a shotgun, a rifle, and a 4 wheel drive. I don't need that shat
Essentially, nothing is covered. I bought an extended warranty for a truck I bought years ago (never again) and the water pump went out.
Water pump was on the list of covered items. They refused it because they said that it was due to "road debris" Never mind the fact that the old water pump (I asked for the part after the repair) showed no signs of external damage. IOW, they had no justification to rule that as the cause of failure, it was just completely arbitrary. And FINAL. LOL
Extended warranties are ALL useless, except for two items (according to a consumer article I read back in the day): Treadmills, and Plasma televisions (which ceased production 10 years ago) LOL
Had a home warranty and the HVAC broke and all it would pay for was cheap 3rd party parts from a crappy contractor I would have never called or allowed to come to my house if I was having to fix it on my own.
Just an FYI, it's worth it to pay a little more to add an OEM coverage endorsement to your personal auto policy because insurance companies will always try and use 3rd party parts in their standard policy language.A 100 day/4000 mile warranty came with a Carvana car I bought two years ago. I didn't buy the extended. The transmission went out after a month. I don't blame Carvana, just luck of the draw. I'd do the transaction again. It was just so painless.
Carvana owns the third party warranty company SilverRock. They agreed that the transmission was defective. The car was too new to have aftermarket remans. They wanted to install a salvage yard transmission.
I shopped my regular mechanic and two others. None wanted third party warranty business, especially installing salvage yard parts. I lucked out at the Ford stealership. They took the work and demanded a Ford remain.
In the end I was fortunate that Carvana didn't have an agreement with any Paducah garages. Carvana's options were to tow my car two hours to one of their guys or let my Ford dealer do the $7000 job. My car didn't leave town for repair.
I only had a $100 deductible.
Score one for the good guys.
If you buy one, check and see which mechanics will actually do business with the warranty company.
How do they not get sued into oblivion then?
Besides, if you ever REALLY need a lawyer, that is probably not the best time to "cheap out"... LOLThe same goes for prepaid legal plans and the like. Even when they pay, the insurance companies have no idea what costs what and it is worse than worthless in most cases.