The Legal Warranty: Automatic Protection for Consumers

When you buy or rent a product, you expect it to work. In an ideal world, everything you buy would be of high quality, durable, safe, free of defects and would meet your expectations! Unfortunately, that’s not always the case.

The Legal Warranty: Automatic Minimum Protection

The legal warranty is a minimum legal protection for consumers. It applies automatically when you buy something.

The legal warranty says that, if a merchant sells you something that isn’t of good quality, durable, safe and in line with any expectations created by the merchant, you can, among other things, get a refund or have the product replaced. The legal warranty also protects consumers against hidden defects.

A legal warranty covers products bought or leased (rented) in Quebec, even if they come from somewhere else. It is provided to consumers free of charge.

Merchants and manufacturers must respect this legal warranty. Before offering an extra warranty to consumers, such as an extended warranty or other protection plan, they must inform consumers orally and in a written notice that they already benefit from the free legal warranty.

The Legal Warranty Is Attached to the Product

The legal warranty is attached to the product. What does that mean?

This means that if you sell the product to someone else, the other person can use the legal warranty, unless it has expired.

Important! Did you buy something from someone (an individual) who is not a merchant? A merchant is someone whose business is to sell goods or services.

Various Kinds of Protection Under the Legal Warranty

1. Quality

You must be able to make normal use of the product. In other words, it has to work. This is protection against a product sometimes called a “lemon.”

For example, a lawnmower that doesn’t mow your lawn doesn’t work for its normal use.

2. Durability

The length of time a product lasts, also called the “life expectancy”, should be reasonable given the price paid, the terms of the contract and any conditions that apply to the use of the product.

In other words, you are protected against defects in a product that appear after you buy it if you use the goods properly.

Of course, an expensive, high-end product will be under the legal warranty for a longer time than a cheaper low-quality product.

Since consumers and merchants don’t always agree on what is a reasonable length of time, this question is often debated in the courts. Here are a few examples of life expectancy considered to be too short:

These examples give you a general idea of reasonable life expectancy. Each situation is different depending on the product and the evidence brought before the court.

3. Product must match description

Products you buy must reflect

4. Safety

A product you buy must be safe: it must not pose a danger to people who use it. You must be warned of any risks.

Careful! If a consumer is careless with the product, the legal warranty doesn’t apply.

5. Hidden defects

For the warranty against hidden defects to apply, the defect must be significant, serious and hidden. Let’s look at this in more detail: