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Florida woman with $30K car loan says her ‘engine blew up’ — and the warranty won’t help. Ramsey hosts respond


When Ami drove her newly purchased used car off the lot, she thought she was set. Instead, she ended up with a blown engine, a $30,000 loan and a $6,000 warranty that won’t pay up — and now she’s fighting to keep her life from stalling out.

When everything went south, the Tampa resident took it to a mechanic. She was shocked to discover that the warranty company wouldn’t cover repairs to the engine.

“They’re trying to get out of it,” said Ami.

Instead, the company told her she’d have to pay for the teardown to determine the cause of the problem — an out-of-pocket expense she can’t afford.

“Basically, I have no car and I’m stuck with this,” Ami said.

After going back and forth with the dealership and warranty company, she ran out of ideas and turned to The Ramsey Show for advice.

“Does it not cover exploding engines?” asked co-hot John Delony.

The details matter when it comes to car warranties. Depending on the fine print, Ami might have to cover the teardown costs before the warranty pays for certain repairs.

“That is insane,” fellow co-host George Kamel said. “I’ve never heard where you have to pay and then maybe the warranty company will reimburse you later.”

It’s rare for a warranty to cover everything that could go wrong with your vehicle. But many do cover engine problems.

Since Ami paid $6,000 for an extended warranty, you’d think it would. But she may have overpaid. The average extended warranty costs about $1,300 a year, according to MarketWatch. Unless hers lasted at least four and a half years, she paid more than most.

“If you bought that warranty through that dealer, then there may be some liability on their part, that they’re pushing a bad product on you,” Delony said.

A key detail: Ami signed an as-is agreement when purchasing the car. Essentially, this legalese means that she purchased the car in its existing condition.

She’s not alone. Other customers of the same dealership have complained about similar warranty issues. The Better Business Bureau’s shows mixed reviews for the business, but many complaints share the same story. In its responses, the dealership often points to the as-is agreement, saying it doesn’t owe help to customers — even those who bought extended warranties.

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