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Report: #884585

Complaint Review: Hankook Tire - Internet Nationwide

  • Submitted:
  • Updated:
  • Reported By: Old Zeke — Tampa Florida United States of America
  • Author Confirmed What's this?
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  • Hankook Tire Nationwide United States of America

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I purchased a new 2012 Kia Forte on March 27, 2012. As of May 15, 2012, the car had just under 1800 miles on it. On May 10th, 2012, I noticed missing tread on both front tires.  Hankook Optimo H426 tires. While the vehicle is front wheel drive, the missing tread was not in the same place on both tires. The following events took place on May 15, 2012.

After contacting Hankook's customer line, I was told to go to one of their dealers to have the tires checked. I went to a Sears Automotive location in NE Tampa.  Sears examined my tires. They told me the damage was caused by a road hazard. They also told me that the car was not safe to drive as is. In 30+ years of driving, I have never seen new or recently new tires sustain anything similar in terms of damage.

Sears called Hankook, who told them that the road hazard warranty did not apply. I also called Hankook. It was explained to me that since I did not purchase the tires, the road hazard warranty was not valid. Sears suggested I go to my Kia dealer. My Kia dealer confirmed that the tires were not covered by Hankook. At this point, I paid over $260 to replace the two front tires. This was at the dealership.

Hankook has tires on new Kia and Hyundai vehicles. When virtually anyone buys a new car, he or she does not normally immediately buy a new set of tires. Thus, I feel ripped off. The tires were new. I paid to replace them. Did I not buy the tires as part of the car purchase? It seems to me that Hankook's policy of not supporting road hazard warranties on OEM tires is neither reasonable nor customer oriented.

My belief is that these tires were defective. On May 18th, I spoke to the individual who is in charge of OEM tire warranties for Hankook. This person told me that "no road hazard coverage" was company policy, and that he was in charge of implementation. If one buys a new car, one gets a warranty. Why new vehicle tires, after less than 2,000 miles of use, cannot be covered by warranty is a mystery to me.

Hankook must make a bundle by having their tires on new Kia and Hyundai vehicles. They should be fully supporting said product, rather than hiding in what I see as semantics. It cost me $260 that I really couldn't afford to spend, nor do I believe I should have been required to do so.

This report was posted on Ripoff Report on 05/18/2012 09:04 AM and is a permanent record located here: https://www.ripoffreport.com/reports/hankook-tire/nationwide/hankook-tire-no-road-hazard-for-oem-tires-internet-nationwide-884585. The posting time indicated is Arizona local time. Arizona does not observe daylight savings so the post time may be Mountain or Pacific depending on the time of year. Ripoff Report has an exclusive license to this report. It may not be copied without the written permission of Ripoff Report. READ: Foreign websites steal our content

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REBUTTALS & REPLIES:
0Author
3Consumer
1Employee/Owner

#4 Consumer Suggestion

Road hazard is almost always optional. OEM tire warranty handled through manufacturers

AUTHOR: DFWsCars - (USA)

POSTED: Tuesday, June 06, 2017

 So even on run flats, I have never heard of a free Road hazard warranty, and it's almost always optional (costco does one but it's not through the tire company). Now Hankook may be doing something revolutionary and cool to boost sales but I had a similar incident with Contiental. They sent me to my dealer. The reason is OEM tires are sold to the car company at a far different price so then the car company would sort of stand behind it. The best example I can give is if your battery went out you would take it to Hyundai and expect them to warrant it, even if you saw some random part in your car was made by X company. Same goes for tires most of the time.

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#3 Consumer Comment

Tire warranty

AUTHOR: Ramjet - (U.S.A.)

POSTED: Friday, May 18, 2012

I don't know about Kia but every new car I've ever bought had a separate warranty booklet for the tires.

They were warranted by the tire manufacturer, not the car company.

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#2 Consumer Comment

" Road Hazard" is the key.

AUTHOR: Flynrider - (USA)

POSTED: Friday, May 18, 2012

  Standard tire warranties cover workmanship and materials for a given period of mileage.   I have never bought a set of tires that had a standard road hazard warranty included.   That was always extra.

   When you bought the car, it came with the standard warranties on components like the tires and battery.   I doubt that Kia sprang for the extra cost to include road hazard in the tire warranty.    If you want to be sure, just look at the paperwork that came with the car.  You should have received the tire warranty along with other paperwork.

  While it sucks to replace tires that are 1,800 miles old, if they were damaged by a road hazard, that's what you have to do.   Think of it this way : If you ran over something at 1,800 miles and damaged your oil pan, do you think Kia would pay for it under warranty? 

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#1 REBUTTAL Owner of company

You Didn't Contact KIA Once?

AUTHOR: Jeff - (U.S.A.)

POSTED: Friday, May 18, 2012

Road Hazard warranties are always extra, even if you buy tires.

But you didn't buy tires, you bought a KIA - if you expected any warranty, it should have been with KIA.

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