A Quebec Tesla owner has filed a class action request against Tesla over heat pump failures, seeking damages for all Tesla owners in the province after being stuck with a $4,477 repair bill when her Model 3’s heat pump died after just six years. The lawsuit covers every Tesla model equipped with a heat pump — Model S, Model 3, Model X, Model Y, and Cybertruck — and alleges the automaker has been hiding a known defect from buyers. A long history of heat pump problems The plaintiff, Amélie Paquette, purchased a new 2021 Model 3 from Tesla’s Laval, Quebec location in December 2020 for $52,880. According to the court filing via Driving, her vehicle’s heat pump system experienced a string of failures from almost the moment she drove it off the lot. Just over a month after purchase, three heat pump sensors had to be replaced. Less than a year later, foreign debris was found inside the fan mechanism. Weeks after that, a major failure caused a total loss of cabin heating, forcing Tesla to replace the compressor, main manifold, and all fluid lines under warranty. Tesla never provided a precise diagnosis for any of these failures. Advertisement - scroll for more content Then, on January 27, 2026, smoke began pouring from inside and outside the vehicle during cabin preheating, accompanied by a chemical odor. Tesla’s Laval service center determined the entire heat pump needed replacement — but this time, the four-year or 80,000-kilometer warranty had expired. The odometer read 158,220 kilometers. Paquette met personally with Tesla’s assistant service director at the Laval location to demand a free replacement or shared responsibility. Tesla refused. She paid $4,476.55 out of pocket and later sent a formal demand letter. Tesla rejected that too, by email, on March 17, 2026. The lawsuit targets all heat pump-equipped Teslas The class action request, filed before Quebec’s Superior Court by lawyers from Perrier Avocats, seeks to represent all Quebec consumers who own or lease a heat pump-equipped Tesla: Model S (2021+), Model 3 (2021+), Model X (2021+), Model Y (2020+), and Cybertruck (2023+). The lawsuit alleges Tesla’s heat pump constitutes a “hidden defect” under Quebec’s Civil Code and Consumer Protection Act, making the vehicles “unfit for their intended use.” The filing argues that a vehicle of Tesla’s price and quality should serve without major repair for at least 10 years or 200,000 kilometers — a standard the plaintiff’s Model 3 failed to meet by a wide margin. The lawsuit further alleges that Tesla, as a professional seller, is presumed to have known about the defect and failed to disclose the risks associated with the heat pump system to buyers. The class action seeks reimbursement of repair costs, a reduction in purchase or lease prices, and punitive damages. This is not Tesla’s first legal trouble in Quebec. The province’s Superior Court has previously authorized class action lawsuits against Tesla over paint defects and Premium Connectivity changes. Tesla is also facing up to $14.5 billion in lawsuits across multiple jurisdictions. A well-documented problem Tesla’s heat pump issues are hardly new. We first reported on widespread heating failures in brand-new Model 3 and Model Y vehicles in January 2021. By early 2022, the problem had escalated significantly, with owners losing heat entirely in extreme cold as temperatures dropped below -10°C. Tesla CEO Elon Musk said at the time that a software update would fix the issue by recalibrating a valve in the heat pump system. But Tesla service centers told affected owners it was a hardware problem — a flap or valve getting stuck due to ice buildup, which traps refrigerant inside the evaporator and causes the compressor to shut down. NHTSA eventually issued a recall covering certain 2021-2022 Model 3, Model Y, Model S, and Model X vehicles, confirming that the heat pump problem compromised windshield defrosting — a federal safety standard violation. Transport Canada also launched its own investigation after receiving over 170 complaints from Canadian owners, the majority from Quebec. Out-of-warranty heat pump repairs typically cost between $3,800 and $4,700 in Canada, making it one of the most expensive maintenance surprises for Tesla owners. Unlike traditional PTC ceramic heaters, heat pump systems are deeply integrated with Tesla’s battery thermal management system, limiting repair options to Tesla service centers. Electrek’s Take This lawsuit was inevitable. Tesla’s heat pump has been one of the most persistent reliability issues across its lineup, and Quebec, where winters regularly push temperatures well below -20°C, is arguably the worst place for a heat pump system that has demonstrated repeated failures in extreme cold. We’ve been covering Tesla’s heat pump problems since 2021, and the pattern described in this lawsuit is one we’ve heard dozens of times from readers: repeated failures under warranty, vague diagnoses from service centers, and then an expensive bill the moment the warranty expires. A heat pump failing at 158,000 kilometers on a $53,000 vehicle after 3 separate repairs under warranty is not acceptable, and the lawsuit’s argument that a Tesla should last at least 10 years or 200,000 kilometers without a major failure is entirely reasonable. Quebec’s consumer protection laws are among the strongest in North America, and they explicitly create a legal warranty of quality that goes beyond the manufacturer’s written warranty. Tesla has learned this the hard way before. The real question is whether this class action gets authorized and how many owners it ultimately represents — because based on the volume of complaints to Transport Canada alone, the number could be significant. It could reportedly be worth up to $400 million. If you drive a Tesla or any EV, powering your vehicle with home solar is one of the best ways to cut your energy costs. With electricity rates climbing nearly 10% last year, home solar protects you against future rate increases. And with lease and PPA options, you can go solar with zero upfront cost and start saving immediately. If you want to find the best deal, check out EnergySage. 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