What's covered, what voids it, how Canadian consumer law interacts with manufacturer warranty terms, and what to check before you sign off on a purchase.
Skid steer attachment warranties are often unread until something breaks — at which point buyers discover their expectations didn't match what the warranty actually provided. For a $3,000 bucket or a $15,000 mulcher, understanding the warranty before purchase is worth the fifteen minutes it takes. This guide covers what manufacturer warranties typically cover, the conditions that commonly void coverage, and the Canadian legal context that applies when a warranty dispute arises.
This is not legal advice. It's a practical guide to understanding warranty documents before you're in a dispute over one.
Most skid steer attachment manufacturers offer a limited warranty covering defects in materials and workmanship. The key word is "defects" — the warranty covers things that went wrong at the manufacturing level, not things that wore out or broke through use. The practical scope is:
What is typically not covered by a standard limited warranty:
Warranty duration varies significantly by manufacturer and product category. Common structures include:
Extended warranties are offered by some manufacturers and third-party programs. Read these carefully — they sometimes require maintenance to be performed by authorized dealers (which can be difficult to satisfy for operators far from dealer networks), and they may carry deductibles that reduce their practical value.
Warranty claims are rejected more often than buyers expect. The most common reasons:
This is the single most frequent cause of powered attachment warranty rejection. Most hydraulic attachments — augers, mulchers, sweepers, breakers — specify a required hydraulic flow range (in GPM) and maximum pressure (in PSI). If the host machine delivers flow or pressure outside that range, damage to the attachment's hydraulic motor is not covered. This applies whether the host machine runs too high or too low. Owners who purchase high-flow attachments and run them on standard-flow machines, or who have their machine's relief valve set incorrectly, often find themselves outside warranty coverage.
See our hydraulic flow guide for details on matching flow and pressure requirements.
Warranty documents typically specify intended use. A root grapple rated for land clearing work used for demolition-grade prying and lifting activities may void coverage if a structural failure occurs. A bucket rated for soil and aggregate used to push and pry at concrete will void coverage for any resulting damage. The language is often vague — "normal use" and "intended application" — which is where disputes arise. The practical standard is: if a reasonable person looking at the damage would conclude you were doing something outside the product's obvious intended purpose, the manufacturer will likely argue misuse.
Welding additional wear plates, changing tooth patterns, modifying cutting edge geometry, or adding components to an attachment after purchase typically voids warranty coverage on any damage attributable to the modification — and sometimes on the attachment as a whole. This is particularly relevant for operators in Canada who work in high-wear conditions and want to improve wear resistance by adding aftermarket wear packages.
Some manufacturers require product registration within a specified window after purchase — 30, 60, or 90 days — to activate warranty coverage. Failing to register doesn't eliminate the warranty in Canada (as discussed below), but it can complicate claims if the manufacturer uses registration as proof of purchase date for warranty period calculation.
Canada's legal environment for consumer and commercial warranties differs from the United States, and differs between provinces. The federal Competition Act applies national rules around misleading advertising in warranty representations, but warranty enforceability is primarily provincial contract and sale of goods law.
Each province has Sale of Goods legislation that implies certain warranties into contracts for the sale of goods, regardless of what a manufacturer's warranty document says. Implied warranties include that goods are of merchantable quality — meaning they're fit for the ordinary purposes for which such goods are used — and that they correspond to their description. These implied warranties exist in addition to any manufacturer's express warranty, and they can't generally be excluded from consumer transactions under most provincial frameworks.
For business-to-business transactions — which most skid steer attachment purchases are — the Sale of Goods implied warranties can be excluded by contract. Manufacturer warranty documents typically include language attempting to disclaim implied warranties. Whether that exclusion is enforceable depends on the specific province and the terms of the purchase agreement.
Several provinces have Consumer Protection Acts that apply specific protections to consumer transactions. In Ontario, BC, Quebec, and Alberta, these acts provide remedies for goods that fail to meet implied standards of quality, independent of the manufacturer's warranty terms. Quebec's Consumer Protection Act is notably strong — it provides an implicit guarantee of durability that applies even when manufacturer warranties have expired, if the good's quality doesn't align with the price paid and reasonable consumer expectations.
Note for Quebec buyers: Quebec's consumer protection framework provides more extensive warranty rights than most other provinces, including durability guarantees that survive the express warranty period. If you're purchasing a high-value attachment and anticipate a durability dispute, it's worth understanding your provincial rights before relying solely on the manufacturer's warranty terms.
Canadian buyers sometimes purchase attachments from US dealers or directly from US manufacturers to save money. This can create warranty complications: US warranty documents may specify that coverage is only available through US dealer networks, and warranty terms written for US legal frameworks don't automatically map to Canadian provincial law. Shipping and customs costs on returned warranty items can also be substantial.
For grey-market purchases from overseas — attachments manufactured in China or elsewhere, sold through online marketplaces — warranty terms may be minimal or practically unenforceable given the logistics of returning a failed attachment to a foreign manufacturer. The lower purchase price needs to be weighed against the likelihood of warranty support actually materializing if needed. See our attachment buying guides for more context on the import vs domestic dealer tradeoffs.
If something fails and you believe it's a warranty-covered defect:
When evaluating attachments, review warranty terms as part of the purchase decision:
For more guidance on attachment selection and purchase decisions, see our attachment lifespan and replacement guide — understanding realistic wear rates helps set expectations about what should and shouldn't be covered under a standard warranty.