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Extended Warranty · Georgia

Extended car warranty in Georgia: cost, lemon law & providers

Georgia drivers pay an average of $1,580/year for an extended vehicle service contract — matches national avg. Below: the top-rated providers, Georgia's lemon-law coverage window (12 months / 12,000 miles), and the questions to ask before buying.

Last reviewed 2026-06-29.

What's different about warranties here · Georgia

Georgia treats VSCs as insurance products and requires consumer-protection-style disclosures at sale.

Avg annual cost in Georgia

$1,580

matches national avg

Lemon-law coverage

12 months / 12,000 miles

From the in-service date for new vehicles

State regulator

Georgia Office of Insurance and Safety Fire Commissioner

Verify your provider is licensed

Georgia quirk

Georgia treats VSCs as insurance products and requires consumer-protection-style disclosures at sale.

Top warranty providers serving Georgia

All listed providers operate in Georgia and are licensed where required by Georgia Office of Insurance and Safety Fire Commissioner.

Advertiser disclosure: Offers below are from partners that compensate us when you click or apply. Compensation does not determine our rankings. How we make money.

Updated Jun 30, 2026

Top extended warranty providers

Comparing 6 audited providers· Prices verified Jun 30

Data last reviewed . Source: CarSavr editorial methodology.

All 6 reviewed within 7 days

Editor's pick · 2-min compare

Endurance

≈2 min · Soft pullAffiliate offer
6 providers shown, sorted by default editor's pick order.

Compare extended warranty providers

See multiple VSC quotes side-by-side

Free quotes · No phone calls · 30-day cancellation guarantee

1
Endurance
Editor's pick
Reviewed 4d ago
≈2 min · Soft pullAffiliate offer
2
Toco Warranty logo
Reviewed 4d ago
3
Concord Auto Protect logo
Reviewed 4d ago
CARCHEX logo
Reviewed 4d ago
≈2 min · Soft pullAffiliate offer
Forever Car Warranty logo
Reviewed 4d ago
Protect My Car logo
Reviewed 4d ago

Warranty plan costs vary by vehicle make, model, mileage, and coverage tier. Quotes are provided directly by the provider. CarSavr may earn a commission when you purchase a plan through our links — it never affects how we rank providers.

Provider logos and trademarks belong to their respective owners and are used for identification purposes only. Providers shown for comparison and educational purposes — display does not imply partnership unless an active affiliate relationship is stated separately.

How rows are ranked: Editor's pick first, then by overall rating. Promoted placements are flagged with a Sponsored badge. Read the full methodology →

Why warranty math looks different in Georgia

Georgia drivers consistently overpay for vehicle service contracts (VSCs) sourced through dealer F&I offices. The same coverage from a licensed third-party administrator typically runs 30-50% less than dealer-financed plans. Because Georgia Office of Insurance and Safety Fire Commissioner regulates VSCs as service contracts (not insurance), third-party providers can write coverage directly to Georgia buyers without the dealership middleman markup.

The biggest cost driver on warranty quotes in Georgiais not the vehicle itself but the repair-cost basket: local labor rates, dealer-shop hourly fees, and the average cost of common-failure repairs (electrical, transmission, HVAC). State-by-state, those numbers vary by 25-40%, which is why a Honda Civic warranty quote in Georgia can be hundreds of dollars different from the identical policy quoted in a neighboring state.

Three rules of thumb for shopping warranties in Georgia:

  1. Always get 3 third-party quotes before signing anything at the dealership. The F&I office quote becomes the negotiating ceiling, not the floor.
  2. Verify the administrator is licensed in Georgia. The Georgia Office of Insurance and Safety Fire Commissioner maintains a public lookup so you can confirm before you pay. Unlicensed warranty companies can disappear with your premium.
  3. Read the cancellation clause. Georgia requires VSC providers to offer a prorated refund if you cancel — federal law (Magnuson-Moss) protects this right. Confirm the exact formula in writing before you sign.

The bottom line: a $2,400 dealer-financed bumper-to-bumper warranty in Georgia routinely covers the same repairs as a $1,500 third-party plan. The difference ( roughly $900 over the life of the contract) goes straight to the dealership's F&I commission pool — money that stays in your pocket if you shop outside the dealer.

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Frequently asked questions

Frequently asked questions