Welcome to our used car warranty guide, a clear and practical resource to help you understand coverage options, compare plans, and protect your budget after you buy. Whether you are looking at a basic powertrain warranty, an exclusionary plan that acts like bumper to bumper, or a certified pre owned warranty, knowing what is covered and what is not can save time and money. In this guide, you will learn common terms like deductible, transferability, and waiting period, plus how claims really work with service departments. Use it alongside our buyer resources, including used-inventory, certified-pre-owned-vs-used, used-car-inspection-checklist, and used-vehicles-with-best-warranty-coverage. By the end, you will be able to match the right protection to your budget, mileage, and driving style. Explore with confidence and build a plan that fits your next used vehicle.
A used car warranty, also called a vehicle service contract, can protect major components and reduce surprise repair bills. The best plan for you depends on your vehicle age and mileage, how you drive, and your tolerance for risk. Compare coverage levels, review sample contracts, and see how claims are handled through our service team. Explore related guides like how-to-buy-a-used-car and used-car-buying-checklist to plan your purchase.

A used car warranty is a promise to pay for covered repairs on specific vehicle parts for a set time or mileage. On pre owned vehicles, this protection is usually a vehicle service contract rather than the original manufacturer warranty. Coverage ranges from basic powertrain to exclusionary plans that cover most mechanical and electrical items except for listed exclusions. Certified pre owned models often include limited factory backed coverage with the option to add more. The purpose is simple. Reduce out of pocket risk and stabilize repair costs as the vehicle ages.
Different drivers need different coverage. Below are the most common plan types you will see and how they compare.
Coverage depends on your plan. In general, powertrain parts, internal lubricated engine components, transmission assemblies, differentials, and related seals and gaskets are the core. Broader plans may add steering, brakes, suspension, climate control, fuel delivery, cooling system, electrical modules, high tech components, and some driver assistance sensors when specified. Many contracts also include roadside assistance, towing to an authorized repair facility, rental car reimbursement, and trip interruption benefits. See how coverage aligns with your needs by comparing options on extended-warranty-for-used-cars.
Service contracts do not replace maintenance or insure cosmetic items. Most exclude brake pads, rotors when worn, tires, glass, paint, body panels, upholstery, trim, bulbs, wiper blades, and damage from neglect, racing, or misuse. Fluids and filters are maintenance. Diagnostic time may or may not be covered, depending on the plan. Aftermarket modifications can void coverage on related components. Read exclusions carefully and check your owner responsibility section. If you have questions, review terms and policies on terms and visitor-agreement.
When a covered issue appears, schedule a visit with our service department at schedule-service. Provide your contract number and describe the symptom, not the diagnosis. Our technicians will confirm the concern and contact the plan administrator for authorization before repairs begin. You pay the deductible if applicable. Rental or rideshare reimbursement is handled per your plan. If you are traveling, most plans allow you to use a licensed repair facility nationwide. Keep all receipts and maintenance records. Proper documentation makes claims faster.
Used car warranty pricing varies by age, mileage, make, model, coverage level, deductible, and term length. As a general guide, a short term powertrain plan on a modest mileage sedan can cost a few hundred dollars, while multi year exclusionary coverage on a higher tech SUV can cost more. Payments can be added to financing in many cases. Learn more about financing options at payment-options and application steps at applications. Keep in mind that a single transmission or air conditioning repair can exceed the cost of a plan, which is why many buyers prioritize broad coverage.
If you plan to keep your vehicle beyond 100,000 miles, a strong service contract can align with routine maintenance to help the car last. Combine coverage with timely services and inspections. See our insights on durability and long life models at used-cars-with-longest-lifespan and used-cars-that-last-over-200000-miles. For winter states or heavy towing, look at plans that support components under higher stress. Explore model ideas at best-used-vehicles-for-winter-driving and best-used-vehicles-for-towing.
For service history tracking and maintenance planning, book your visit at schedule-service. If you are evaluating a vehicle now, use our used-car-inspection-checklist.
Dealer backed plans can simplify claims with direct relationships and local support. Third party providers can offer wide national networks and flexible terms. Focus on administrator reputation, claim approval process, payment method to shops, parts quality, and included benefits like roadside, rental, and trip interruption. Ask for a sample contract to review exact wording of covered components and exclusions. Look for clear definitions and simple steps to file a claim. If you want more background on pricing and how providers structure risk, see how-dealers-price-used-cars and used-car-ownership-cost-analysis.
Scenario one. High mileage commuter with long daily drives. Exclusionary coverage helps protect electronics, air conditioning, and power accessories that see heavy use. Scenario two. Weekend tower with SUV or truck. Powertrain coverage with good limits and towing benefits can reduce risk on transmission and cooling system repairs. See vehicle ideas at best-used-trucks-for-work and best-used-3-row-suvs. Scenario three. First time buyer on a budget. A simple powertrain plan can cap worst case costs. Explore budget picks at best-used-cars-under-10000 and best-used-cars-under-15000.
Continue learning with these guides and tools.
Browse vehicles on used-inventory, read ownership stories on blog, get location details at locations, and connect with our team at meet-our-staff and bios. When you are ready to drive a vehicle, use schedule-a-test-drive. For title and registration basics, see used-car-title-and-registration-guide.