By the people act.
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.
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.
Status: Passed 1st Reading
Introduced: August 18, 2025
Subject areas: Consumer protection; commerce; warranties; housing; public officials; attorney general; appropriations
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.
Definitions and scope
Contract content and consumer disclosures (added to G.S. 66‑371 / recodified provisions)
Seller / company obligations
Recodification / technical changes
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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