1. Secure the material
We review the listing, purchase agreement, receipt, inspection material, workshop opinions, photos, videos and correspondence with the seller.
When a motorcycle does not match the agreement, a defect appears after purchase or the seller refuses responsibility, you need quick control of the complaint, evidence and next legal step. We help assess whether the matter should be handled as a product defect, breach of contract, price reduction, rescission or damages claim.
Process
We start with what affects your chances: the agreement, timeline, technical evidence, complaint and protection against incorrect counterclaims.
We review the listing, purchase agreement, receipt, inspection material, workshop opinions, photos, videos and correspondence with the seller.
We assess whether there are grounds for complaint, repair, price reduction, rescission, damages or objection to a seller's demand.
You get a concrete recommendation for a written claim, negotiation, insurance legal expenses cover or continued proceedings.
Evidence
Related pages
If the motorcycle dispute involves an invoice, insurance issue or broader purchase-law problem, these pages may be the next step.
Questions
As soon as possible after discovering the defect. Waiting too long can make you lose the right to rely on the defect.
Yes. Dealer purchases are normally covered by consumer sales rules, while private purchases are governed by general sales law. That affects both evidence and rights.
It depends on the importance of the defect, what was agreed and whether the seller has a right or opportunity to remedy it. Rescission normally requires a serious breach.
Often yes, through vehicle or home insurance, but terms and deductible must be checked in the individual case.