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Bill

HB 203

By the people act.

2025 Regular Session Introduced by John Bear and 9 co-sponsors

HB 203 requires clearer disclosures, fixed timelines, and a five‑day service window for home service agreements, with refunds and out‑of‑network options if unmet.

H Did not Consider for Introduction
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Bill Summary · HB 203

HB 203 — Home Warranty Act (Summary)

Status: Passed 1st Reading
Introduced: August 18, 2025
Subject areas: Consumer protection; commerce; warranties; housing; public officials; attorney general; appropriations

Purpose / Intent

HB 203 (the "Home Warranty Act") is intended to strengthen consumer protections for purchasers of home service agreements (commonly marketed as home warranties, extended home warranties, appliance warranties, etc.) by requiring clearer disclosures, standardized contract elements, performance timelines, and operational obligations for companies that issue those agreements. The bill also separates statutory treatment for home service agreements from motor‑vehicle service agreements through recodification of relevant statute sections.

Key provisions

  • Definitions and scope

    • Clarifies that a "home service agreement" covers a specified list of appliances/systems in a residence and applies to non‑insurer service agreement companies.
    • Exempts certain arrangements (manufacturer performance warranties for new appliances; licensed appliance dealers that administer their own agreements; builder/seller warranties tied to property sales; certain credit‑card ancillary programs that maintain required insurance).
  • Contract content and consumer disclosures (added to G.S. 66‑371 / recodified provisions)

    • Agreements must include a clearly referenced list of covered items.
    • Must describe in detail the types of loss/damage covered and specific exclusions.
    • Exclusions must appear prominently and in boldface type.
    • Near purchaser’s signature the contract must display, in bold (minimum 10‑point type), a cancellation statement substantially in this form: "You, the purchaser of this service agreement, may cancel this contract at anytime after purchase and receive a pro rata refund less any claims paid on the agreement and a reasonable administrative fee, not to exceed ten percent (10%) of the amount of the pro rata refund."
  • Seller / company obligations

    • Provide a paper or electronic copy of the agreement at signing; accessible formats must be available for persons with disabilities.
    • Maintain and provide an updated list of company‑approved vendors; customers must be allowed to use approved vendors.
    • Service timing requirement: for covered items necessary for heating, air‑conditioning, or for use of a single bathroom in a residence, the company must complete or schedule the repair/replacement/maintenance within five business days of a consumer claim. If the company cannot meet that five‑day window, it must pay to have an out‑of‑network vendor perform the service.
  • Recodification / technical changes

    • The bill reorganizes/recodifies existing statute subsections to distinguish home service agreement rules from those governing motor vehicle service agreements and centralizes definitions and miscellaneous requirements (e.g., disclosures that purchasing an agreement is not required to buy or finance an appliance).

Who is affected

  • Consumers/homeowners purchasing home service agreements — gain stronger disclosure rights, a clear cancellation/refund rule, and faster remedies for certain urgent repairs.
  • Service agreement companies (non‑insurers) — must change contract language and compliance procedures, maintain vendor lists, deliver copies at signing, and meet the five‑day service/scheduling requirement or pay out‑of‑network costs.
  • Approved vendors and out‑of‑network service providers — may see shifts in work volume and payment obligations.
  • Licensed appliance dealers, builders/sellers, and certain credit‑card issuers — may be exempt if they meet specified criteria.
  • Consumer protection/enforcement authorities (e.g., Attorney General) — may see increased enforcement responsibility.

Procedural / timeline notes

  • As provided, HB 203 has passed its first reading (per bill metadata). If enacted, effective date is determined by the implementing statute (none specified in the excerpt).
  • The bill includes statutory recodification; implementing rules or guidance and industry adjustments would follow enactment.

Potential impacts and considerations

  • Consumer benefit: improved transparency, clear cancellation/refund mechanics, and faster service for critical systems.
  • Business impact: compliance and administrative costs for service agreement companies (contract redesign, vendor management, faster scheduling capability or contracted out‑of‑network payments).
  • Fiscal impact: not specified in the provided text; potential minor state or local enforcement costs if oversight increases.
  • Enforcement/ambiguities: operational terms (e.g., what qualifies as “scheduled for completion,” how “necessary for … functioning of a bathroom” is proved) may require later administrative guidance or litigated interpretation.

If you’d like, I can:
- Extract the exact statutory text changes (section-by-section) based on the bill’s full text,
- Draft a one‑page explainer for consumers summarizing their new rights under the bill, or
- Identify likely compliance steps service agreement companies should take now.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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