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Question by  aphrodite891 (31)

What is the warranty on a Hyundai for a loose tire rod?

 
+7

Answer by  jhills (58)

The warranty on a Hyundai is a 5 year bumper to bumper warranty and a 10 year powertrain warranty. The bumper to bumper covers accidental damage, and the powertrain has to do with the manufacturing done by the company. Tie rods would proably be covered by powertrain, so the warranty would be 10 years.

 
+7

Answer by  bigdaddy (150)

Depending on the model most hyundai came with a 5yr/50,000mile for entire car. After that it would depend on if you have an aftermarket warranty company or not.

 
+6

Answer by  jmaxwell (12)

There is no such thing as a "tire rod". If you meant to say the "tie rod", the warranty should cover the tie rod. The tie rod is the mechanical component that takes the input from the steering wheel, and via the steering pump, translates that movement to the wheel.

 
+6

Answer by  Amber40 (24961)

Well I believe that would be covered either under the bumper to bumper or drive train warranty. It should be classified as a steering components but without seeing the warranty requirements i can't say for sure.

 
+5

Answer by  newpa11 (62)

I think that the warranty is only good for one year and after that year maintenance is something that has to be paid for. I do not know what a tie rod entails, but I do believe that it should not be something that expensive. If you extend your car's warranty I would think it would be covered.

 
+5

Answer by  clair58 (177)

The warranty on a Hyundai loose tire rod is - if you met with an accident, they will give set of tires

 
+5

Answer by  cody (1331)

a warranty is only on a car that normally has under 100,000 miles on it. it depends how new the car is and everything like that. if you have a new car with under 100,000 miles on it they will fix it for free. but if you dont you need to fix it yourself

 
+4

Answer by  Doug77 (1433)

In the past decade most vehicle manufacturers have been famous for their 5 year or 100,000 mile factory warranties to improve sales. If your car falls below either of these levels you are still covered under the original warranty - whether you are the original owner or not (as long as there is no obvious "user induced" damage).

 
+4

Answer by  Joe1010us (239)

That specifically depends on your purchase of the vehicle and the warranty provided at the dealership. Its a common problem and is usually very affordable.

 
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