2021 GLB 250 — Engine Seized, Warranty Extension Denied Due to ‘Missed Maintenance’?
I need some advice and to see if anyone else has dealt with this.
I own a 2021 GLB 250 with about 81k miles. It had the M260 engine cylinder head/exhaust valve defect, which is a known issue — Mercedes even sent out a warranty extension letter covering this defect for 15 years or 150,000 miles, regardless of ownership.
Here’s my situation:
- Mercedes was test driving my car after a repair, and the engine seized and failed on their watch — not mine.
- Now they are refusing to fix it under the warranty extension.
- Their excuse: the previous owner allegedly missed some maintenance — but they won’t provide any proof of which service was missed or how that caused the valve defect.
- My understanding is that the defect is a design flaw, so missed oil changes by a prior owner shouldn’t void this special extension.
I’ve asked for:
✅ Proof of what service was missed.
✅ Technical explanation of how that caused the failure.
✅ Written documentation — so far they haven’t given me anything solid.
Has anyone here dealt with Mercedes denying a warranty repair like this due to “missed maintenance” on an obvious factory defect?
- Did you win it through the dealer?
- Did you have to file a Lemon Law or Attorney General complaint?
- Any tips on how to push back?
I really appreciate any advice, similar stories, or contacts you might have — I want to get this resolved fairly and not pay out of pocket for a defect Mercedes admits exists.
Thank you so much for reading and helping! 🙏



Last edited by smiles201; Jun 19, 2025 at 08:32 PM.




However, the cylinder head extended warranty for the M260 is about worn valve seats, which in itself does not cause an engine seizure. Rather it leads to inefficiencies, compression and performance losses, misfires and rough engine, but seizure of the engine it doesn't cause unless the valve brakes off, but you'd have to ignore the misfires etc. for a very long time before the valves wears out so badly that it brakes off. So, the engine failure is very likely not related to the defect the extended warranty covers.
Also, even though it is a known issue with the M260 engine, these known issues never affect a 100% of the engines, especially if the engine has been properly maintained. In the absence of proper maintenance, there's reasonable doubt that the missed maintenance contributed to the engine failure. You can try to fight it, but likely will face an uphill battle, because as said, the defect the extended warranty covers does not really result in engine seizures.
Last edited by superswiss; Jun 19, 2025 at 08:20 PM.
Thank you — this is really helpful and lines up with what I’ve found too.
Here’s what’s confusing in my case:
- My GLB’s original issue was exactly the worn valve seats in cylinder #4 (which the extension covers).
- Mercedes replaced the cylinder head, then while THEY were test driving it, the engine seized — they say it’s because the bearing in cylinder #4 locked up.
So technically, the same cylinder that had the valve defect is where the bearing failed, and it only failed after they repaired the head.
Now they’re denying coverage because they say the first owner missed some maintenance, but they haven’t given me any proof or clear cause-and-effect explanation.
I get that a valve issue doesn’t always seize an engine, but if they’re linking the bearing failure to lack of oil changes, they need to show it in writing — so far they haven’t.
I’m pushing them for this and considering Lemon Law if they won’t back it up properly.
However, the cylinder head extended warranty for the M260 is about worn valve seats, which in itself does not cause an engine seizure. Rather it leads to inefficiencies, compression and performance losses, misfires and rough engine, but seizure of the engine it doesn't cause unless the valve brakes off, but you'd have to ignore the misfires etc. for a very long time before the valves wears out so badly that it brakes off. So, the engine failure is very likely not related to the defect the extended warranty covers.
Also, even though it is a known issue with the M260 engine, these known issues never affect a 100% of the engines, especially if the engine has been properly maintained. In the absence of proper maintenance, there's reasonable doubt that the missed maintenance contributed to the engine failure. You can try to fight it, but likely will face an uphill battle, because as said, the defect the extended warranty covers does not really result in engine seizures.
Here’s what’s confusing in my case:
- My GLB’s original issue was exactly the worn valve seats in cylinder #4 (which the extension covers).
- Mercedes replaced the cylinder head, then while THEY were test driving it, the engine seized — they say it’s because the bearing in cylinder #4 locked up.
So technically, the same cylinder that had the valve defect is where the bearing failed, and it only failed after they repaired the head.
Now they’re denying coverage because they say the first owner missed some maintenance, but they haven’t given me any proof or clear cause-and-effect explanation.
I get that a valve issue doesn’t always seize an engine, but if they’re linking the bearing failure to lack of oil changes, they need to show it in writing — so far they haven’t.
I’m pushing them for this and considering Lemon Law if they won’t back it up properly.




Here’s what’s confusing in my case:
- My GLB’s original issue was exactly the worn valve seats in cylinder #4 (which the extension covers).
- Mercedes replaced the cylinder head, then while THEY were test driving it, the engine seized — they say it’s because the bearing in cylinder #4 locked up.
So technically, the same cylinder that had the valve defect is where the bearing failed, and it only failed after they repaired the head.
Now they’re denying coverage because they say the first owner missed some maintenance, but they haven’t given me any proof or clear cause-and-effect explanation.
I get that a valve issue doesn’t always seize an engine, but if they’re linking the bearing failure to lack of oil changes, they need to show it in writing — so far they haven’t.
I’m pushing them for this and considering Lemon Law if they won’t back it up properly.



Last edited by smiles201; Jun 20, 2025 at 12:09 AM.
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Trenton O. Gibson
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Make them prove they did not cause issue because it happened while they had the car not you.
They need to prove it was not their fault first IMHO.



