A Quebec owner of a 2024 Lucid Air Pure has won a lemon law arbitration that forced the company to cancel his lease and take back the vehicle roughly 18 months into a four-year agreement. The case, which he detailed on the Lucid Owners forum, is drawing attention less for the outcome and more for how Lucid‘s legal team apparently conducted themselves during the process. According to the owner, Lucid’s lawyers made a series of claims that left both him and the arbitrator in stunned silence. Among them were suggestions that the car’s ADAS system was pushing him into oncoming traffic because he wasn’t using his turn signal, that the car’s frunk malfunction in freezing temperatures was “by design,” and that the car was never meant to be parked outdoors in winter.
Lucid’s Track Record With Quality
In this case, the issues described were not minor, such as multiple towing incidents, needing wheel alignments three times a year, which Lucid allegedly justified by claiming the car weighed over 6,000 pounds, trim falling off, and electrical gremlins. When he raised the repeated trim failures, Lucid’s position was apparently that anything falling off more than once was customer abuse, not a design flaw.
Lucid
The Air Pure has faced a string of safety recalls that paint a troubling picture of quality control at scale. Lucid recalled 3,627 Air Pure sedans over rear-drive half-shafts that could detach while driving, with the problem traced to irregularities in bolt fastening, adhesive application, and even the reuse of bolts. Then, a separate recall covering 2,039 Air sedans emerged over a Gen 4 inverter defect that could cause sudden, unwarned loss of drive power, with 55 confirmed failures counted between March 2025 and March 2026. The Gravity SUV hasn’t fared much better. A recall in March 2026 covered 4,476 Gravity vehicles after second-row lap belt anchor brackets were found to have been manufactured with weak welds that could fail in a crash.
Why People Still Want One Anyway
None of this fully dims the appeal of the car itself. The Lucid Air is the longest-range electric car on the US market and one of the quickest-accelerating vehicles of any kind, with a more luxurious cabin than any Tesla and performance numbers that challenge supercars. The range runs from 420 miles on the Pure to 512 on the Grand Touring, while the Sapphire tops out at 1,234 horsepower with a 0-60 time of 1.9 seconds.
Lucid
On paper, and often enough in practice, it’s a remarkable car. This particular owner himself described the car as beautiful, comfortable, and technologically advanced, even as he called it the worst ownership experience of his life. That’s the issue, really. Lucid is trying to be a world-class luxury EV maker. The problem is that world-class luxury car manufacturers definitely don’t blame customers for parking outside in winter.
