Updated 2026-06-24
Lenovo Warranty: How Long & How to Claim
Laptops / PCs · confidence: high
In short: Lenovo's standard manufacturer warranty is 1 year limited warranty (base, mainstream consumer laptops). Some products run longer — see below. You generally don't need to register to be covered; keep your proof of purchase to claim.
| Standard warranty | 1 year limited warranty (base, mainstream consumer laptops) |
|---|---|
| How to claim | Lenovo Support via serial lookup (pcsupport.lenovo.com — warranty lookup) to create a service request, or phone; depot/mail-in or onsite per plan. |
| Registration | Not required — coverage tied to serial at point of sale; extension requires a purchased upgrade. |
Exceptions & longer terms: Base term varies by line; many ThinkPad/premium and business models ship with or upgrade to multi-year terms; some entry models carry 1yr depot/mail-in service.
Never lose a warranty again
A Lenovo warranty only helps if you can prove the purchase date. WarrantyKeep stores each product's purchase date, receipt photo and warranty length, and reminds you before it expires.
Download WarrantyKeep — free on the App StoreLenovo warranty FAQ
How long is the Lenovo warranty?
1 year limited warranty (base, mainstream consumer laptops). Terms vary by product — see the exceptions below.
How do I claim a Lenovo warranty?
Lenovo Support via serial lookup (pcsupport.lenovo.com — warranty lookup) to create a service request, or phone; depot/mail-in or onsite per plan.
Do I need to register my Lenovo product?
Not required — coverage tied to serial at point of sale; extension requires a purchased upgrade.
Warranty facts that apply to any brand
- Manufacturer warranty and an extended/retailer 'protection plan' are two different things — the manufacturer warranty is free and covers defects; an extended plan (Geek Squad, Asurion, SquareTrade) is a separate paid service contract sold by a third party, not the maker.
- The Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act and the implied warranty of merchantability protect you beyond the written terms — this federal law preserves an implied warranty that goods work as expected, and a written warranty can't disclaim it while it lasts — baseline protection even after fine-print limits.
- Keep the receipt / proof of purchase — it's what actually proves coverage — almost every brand requires a dated proof of purchase to validate a claim and set the start date; without it a valid claim can be denied.
- Many credit cards add extended-warranty coverage automatically when you pay with the card — Visa, Mastercard and Amex have historically extended the maker's warranty (often by up to a year) at no cost on eligible purchases — check your card's current benefits guide.
- In the US you usually do NOT have to register a product to be covered — registration mainly enables recalls and marketing; some brands (Instant Pot) state in writing that not registering won't reduce your rights. Exceptions exist where registration unlocks an extension (LG, SharkNinja, Bosch lasers).
Source: support.lenovo.com — product warranty. General info — confirm current terms with Lenovo.