- Joined
- Jun 24, 2008
- Messages
- 48,603
- Location
- London
- Car
- 2022 Hyundai IONIQ 5 RWD / 2016 Suzuki Vitara AWD
Not exactly breaking news, I know...
Just bought a 'nearly-new' Kia, which has the 7-year warranty.
It comprises of 3-years 'standard' warranty with unlimited mileage, and then 4-years of extended warranty with a 100,000 miles limit.
Kia Motors confirmed the following:
If a service is carried-out late (3 months late in my particular case), this will not automatically invalidate the warranty, instead it will only affect any claims regarding faults that can be directly attributed to the late service - e.g. failed turbo charger on Diesel engines due to dirty oil etc.
The car can be serviced at any VAT-Registered garage as long as original Kia parts are used - and this is the case for the entire seven years, i.e. both the standard warranty (which is common across manufacturers anyway) and the extended warranty (where other manufacturers usually insist on dealer-only servicing as a warranty condition).
MB - take notice.
Just bought a 'nearly-new' Kia, which has the 7-year warranty.
It comprises of 3-years 'standard' warranty with unlimited mileage, and then 4-years of extended warranty with a 100,000 miles limit.
Kia Motors confirmed the following:
If a service is carried-out late (3 months late in my particular case), this will not automatically invalidate the warranty, instead it will only affect any claims regarding faults that can be directly attributed to the late service - e.g. failed turbo charger on Diesel engines due to dirty oil etc.
The car can be serviced at any VAT-Registered garage as long as original Kia parts are used - and this is the case for the entire seven years, i.e. both the standard warranty (which is common across manufacturers anyway) and the extended warranty (where other manufacturers usually insist on dealer-only servicing as a warranty condition).
MB - take notice.