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Tesla has revised its new car warranty to allow warranty claims for cars sold in Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand to be done seamlessly across all three countries.
Previously, owners of Teslas sold by Tesla Malaysia would have to make warranty claims in their “home market”. While we generally drive our cars in the countries where we bought them, this might be an issue if you had something break down while on a road trip in Singapore or Thailand.
According to Tesla Malaysia, this revision in warranty terms was made after observing that Tesla owners in Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand were frequent travelers along the peninsular, so cross-country claims would better meet their needs.
Tesla’s current single country warranty terms for Malaysia
Tesla’s Europe-wide warranty for Teslas sold in Europe
This revision mirrors the arrangement that currently exists in the European market where Teslas sold in any European country can have their warranty claims done anywhere within the continent, including the UK which sells right hand drive cars as opposed to Europe’s predominantly left hand drive market.
Tesla Malaysia cars currently come with a 4 year or 80,000 km warranty, whichever comes first. The Supplemental Restraint System Limited Warranty is a bit longer at 5 years or 100,000 km.
As for the Battery and Drive Unit warrranty, it’s covered for a minimum 70% retention of Battery capacity for 8 years, but with different mileage caps depending on model – 160,000 km for the Model 3 RWD, Model 3 Premium RWD and Model Y Premium RWD, and 192,000 km for all other models.
The post Tesla Malaysia warranty now applicable across M’sia, Singapore and Thailand for cross-border mobility appeared first on Paul Tan’s Automotive News.
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[[{“value”:”Tesla has revised its new car warranty to allow warranty claims for cars sold in Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand to be done seamlessly across all three countries. Previously, owners of Teslas sold by Tesla Malaysia
The post Tesla Malaysia warranty now applicable across M’sia, Singapore and Thailand for cross-border mobility appeared first on Paul Tan’s Automotive News.”}]] Read More Paul Tan’s Automotive News


