Archived Copies of Warranty Week
December 2002 to Today
- Worldwide Auto Warranty Expenses: Most auto manufacturers have filed their latest annual reports, so the totals are in for 2021: $45.9 B in claims paid, a 2.4% claims rate, $54.0 B in accruals made, a 2.8% accrual rate, $128.4 B in reserves held, and $653 in accruals made per vehicle sold. Claims and accrual totals changed little last year, but because sales rebounded in 2021, the expense rates fell.October 6, 2022
- European Automaker Warranty Expenses: Following the merger of FCA and PSA, we're down to just five major automakers in the euro zone: Stellantis, VW, BMW, Mercedes, and Renault. And now that all five have filed their annual reports for 2021, it's time to take a look at their warranty expense reports for the last five years.April 7, 2022
- European Automaker Warranty Expenses, Part 1: Six out of the seven top car manufacturers based in Europe have delivered their annual reports detailing their 2020 sales and warranty expenses. All saw sales declines but some actually increased their warranty expenses last year.May 20, 2021
- New Home & Building Materials Warranty Report: What you won't see in this week's collection of warranty expense reports are soaring or plunging warranty metrics. Most of the building trades' warranty expenses were fairly stable in 2020, with those metrics generally rising or falling by 10% or less. But just as there are exceptions to every rule, there were also a handful of big moves up and down last year.May 6, 2021
- Worldwide Auto Warranty Expenses: Now that most of the world's automakers publish their warranty expenses in their annual reports, it is possible to tally a global total for the industry. In 2019, claims were up but accruals and reserves were down, as were the number of vehicles sold and the product revenue they brought in worldwide.September 10, 2020
- First Quarter Homebuilder Warranty Report: Those who expected a free-fall because of the lockdowns are likely to be pleasantly surprised how non-dire the data looks so far in early 2020. Then again, reports from the second quarter, which ends next week, are expected to show more extensive damage, in spite of all the partial reopenings.June 25, 2020
- U.S. Commercial Vehicle Makers: The warranty expense data in their latest financial reports suggest that the top U.S.-based truck, bus, construction equipment, and agricultural vehicle makers are doing just fine, with relatively stable amounts of claims and accruals, after several reported noticeable expense spikes in previous years.December 19, 2019
- U.S. Consumer Vehicle Makers: The nine-month financial reports suggest that the top U.S.-based passenger car, motorcycle and recreational vehicle makers have seen a slight increase in their warranty costs and a slight decrease in sales, resulting in an upturn in their claims rates. But it's nothing like what happened to them a decade ago, when sales plunged by unprecedented amounts and claims costs didn't.December 5, 2019
- U.S. Auto OEM Warranty Expenses: Now that the second-quarter financial reports are all in, we take a look at the warranty metrics of the U.S.-based industry that manufactures cars, trucks, buses, and all sorts of other vehicles, both large and small. And while the overall totals and averages didn't shift much, some companies saw big changes in their warranty costs. September 5, 2019
- Building Material Warranty Report: As we've seen in recent reports, warranty costs are generally far below their levels of 16 years ago. But in the building trades, depending how we break them into groups, the most recent expense rates of the top manufacturers are the same or slightly higher than they were in 2003.June 6, 2019
- Early Look at Year-End Warranty Data: The Hewlett-Packard family of companies has filed their annual reports, as have a few others such as Deere and Navistar. While companies whose fiscal years end in December are just beginning to publish their warranty expense reports this week, many others with different fiscal years have already released the data.February 14, 2019
- Honda & Toyota Warranty Report: Both companies are recovering from some bad years in terms of warranty costs: Honda in fiscal 2016 and Toyota in fiscal 2017. But according to the figures in their brand new annual reports for the just-finished year of fiscal 2018, both companies are now on the mend, with warranty costs that are still unusually elevated, but not as high as they were a year or two ago.July 5, 2018
- Consumer Reports' 2006 Extended Warranty Ad: There was panic in the industry when one of the most trusted consumer advocates told its readers not to buy extended warranties. Ten years later, the magazine's advice is almost forgotten, and the industry is bigger than ever.September 29, 2016
- Top 100 Warranty Providers of 2015: Most of the major warranty providers have published their annual reports in the past few weeks. By comparing their most recent warranty claims, accrual, and reserve metrics against the same expense figures from a year ago, we can make a series of top 10 lists of the most improved and the most injured warranty providers.March 17, 2016
- Top Warranty Acquisitions: Every once in a while, a manufacturer or retailer is acquired and ceases reporting its warranty expenses, while the acquiring company reports the amount of warranty reserves it gained through the purchase. What follows are some of the largest transactions of and by U.S.-based warranty providers in the past 18 months.November 12, 2015
- Apple's Extended Warranties: Every once in a while, someone sues Apple over its sales of extended warranties. But they never quantify the amount of money involved. Turns out, it's huge, based on some assumptions we made using figures from the company's own annual reports.January 17, 2013
- European Auto Warranties: Their annual reports tell a simple story: Daimler and BMW are reducing their warranty costs. VW is doing just fine. And Fiat is now absorbing the warranty costs of Chrysler.July 5, 2012
- Toyota's Warranties & Recalls: For the first time ever, the automaker's worldwide recall costs have exceeded its warranty costs. And that has changed both what Toyota reports and how it gets reported in the company's financial statements.June 30, 2011
- Data Storage Warranties: Sales are once again rising and warranty costs are falling or at least remaining under control, despite longer warranty durations. But while some companies are cutting their warranty costs for real, at least one is merely changing the way it reports the numbers.September 23, 2010
- Computer Warranty
Claims & Accruals: No news is good news as the computer industry's top warranty providers turn in predictable warranty expense reports. Despite economic turmoil, new product launches and multiple recent acquisitions, claims and accrual rates just aren't changing much.September 16, 2010 - Warranty in Financial Statements: Because warranty disclosures began appearing in annual reports less than seven years ago, it takes a bit of skill to hunt down the right data and turn it into meaningful percentages and ratios. So until the procedures are old enough to make it into the accounting textbooks, here's a step-by-step guide to how it's done, using one company's most recent disclosures as an example.July 30, 2009
- Worldwide Auto Warranties, Part One: Why do Japanese automakers and heavy equipment manufacturers seem to have such low warranty costs? Though sales are down since last year, warranty costs remain under control, according to annual reports filed recently by Toyota, Honda, Komatsu and others.July 2, 2009
- Early Warranty Data: While only a few dozen of the hundreds of warranty reporting manufacturers have filed their year end 2008 financial reports so far, very few of these early filings reflect the turmoil one would expect, given the gloom of recent headlines. Are these early filers the exceptions? Or are things really not as bad as they seem?January 29, 2009
- Warranty Trends in 2008: With the filing of the last few financial reports of this cycle, it's time to look at warranty costs by industry. The big story in 2008 is how falling sales have made warranty claims less affordable for some companies. Warranty reserves peaked at the end of 2007, but claims are still rising. And for hard-hit sectors such as autos and homebuilding, the worst may still be ahead.December 18, 2008
- Dell's Warranty Accounting: Dell is now seriously late with its quarterly financial reports because of investigations some say were prompted by its peculiar warranty accounting methods. Meanwhile, Apple's seems to have turned a corner regarding its recent iPod warranty problems.January 9, 2007
- Product Warranty Spending: With most of the third quarter financial reports behind us, it's looking like warranty spending is up only slightly in 2006. But the changes at some of the top warranty providers are very large, in both dollar and percentage terms.December 12, 2006
- Extended Warranties: Consumer Reports took their best shot. Now the industry has responded, citing the value, price, convenience and savings of time and money as some of the benefits of enhanced service plans.November 29, 2006
- Extended Warranties: Consumer Reports says they're not needed except in a few cases. Others say they're a good value at a reasonable price. As the holiday shopping season begins, whose advice will buyers follow?November 21, 2006
- Product Warranty Trends: Manufacturers seem to pack their end-of-year reports with as much warranty expense as they can find, creating a kind of step function in the quarterly data.January 11, 2005
- Warranty Claims: While hundreds of manufacturers have now filed financial reports detailing their warranty activity during the third quarter, it remains unclear why claims rose by more than five percent. Is it a seasonal fluctuation? Or is it proof that the recession is finally behind us? Here's a down payment on the answer, highlighting trends among the top 50 warranty providers.December 8, 2003
- Don't TREAD On Me: NHTSA has announced that TREAD Act reports will be presumed to be confidential. If, as some expect, NHTSA won't be able to analyze the flood of data it's about to receive, and it won't release that data to the public, what's the benefit of compliance beyond penalty avoidance?November 10, 2003
- Don't TREAD On Me: Part 1: Because of the Firestone tire fiasco, automakers must begin compiling quarterly reports on consumer complaints and warranty claims beginning tomorrow.March 31, 2003