What factory-direct and brand dealer warranties actually cover — and what they do not.
You have picked your floor scrubber. You have checked the specs, compared the price, and calculated the ROI. Now comes the question that most buyers forget until after they sign: what happens when it breaks?
A good floor scrubber warranty is worth thousands of dollars over the life of the machine. A bad one leaves you paying for repairs on equipment you thought was covered. The difference between the two is rarely obvious from the sales brochure. This commercial floor scrubber warranty guide walks through what standard warranties cover, how factory-direct and brand dealer warranties differ, and what you should ask before you buy.
Commercial floor scrubber warranties typically fall into two buckets: the base warranty that comes with the machine, and extended coverage you can purchase. Most base warranties run 1 to 3 years and cover manufacturing defects in materials and workmanship. That means if a motor burns out because of a faulty winding, or a weld cracks on the frame, the manufacturer replaces it at no cost to you.
Key components often have separate, longer coverage periods:
What is not covered: Wear items are almost universally excluded. Brushes and pads, squeegee blades, vacuum hoses, seals, tires, and filters are considered consumables. Battery replacement due to normal degradation is also excluded. If the machine breaks because you ran over debris and cracked the squeegee assembly, that is a repair, not a warranty claim.
This is where the biggest differences show up. Buying from a brand dealer (Tennant, Nilfisk, Kärcher) means your warranty goes through the dealer, who then deals with the manufacturer. That extra layer creates friction.
The factory-direct model assumes you have a maintenance person or a local service partner who can install replacement parts. This works for most facilities that already have in-house maintenance staff. The brand dealer model includes labor, but you pay for it in a higher purchase price — typically 20-40% more for the same class of machine.
Over five years, the factory-direct approach usually wins on total cost. A facility manager in North Carolina told us he paid $22,000 for a comparable ride-on from a national brand dealer. His TerraScrub equivalent cost $15,500. In four years of operation, he has needed one controller board replacement ($380, shipped overnight) and two sets of brushes. With the brand dealer, he would have paid $6,500 more upfront and still had to cover consumables.
Before you buy any floor scrubber, ask these five questions. The answers tell you everything about the quality of the warranty — and the company behind it.
A good warranty is worthless if you accidentally void it. The most common warranty-killers are preventable:
Warranty means nothing if you cannot reach anyone when the machine is down. Support expectations differ significantly between factory-direct and dealer models:
For most facilities, the deciding factor is whether you have your own maintenance team. If you do, factory-direct support works well — you fix it, they send the parts. If you do not, a local dealer with a service truck might be worth the higher upfront cost.
Most commercial floor scrubbers come with a 1-to-3-year warranty covering manufacturing defects in parts and workmanship. Key components like traction motors and controller boards may have separate, longer coverage periods. Batteries are usually covered by a separate battery manufacturer warranty (1 year for lead-acid, 2-5 years for lithium).
Batteries are typically sold with a separate warranty from the battery manufacturer, not the scrubber manufacturer. Lead-acid batteries usually carry a 1-year warranty. Lithium-ion batteries often carry 2-5 years. Normal capacity loss over time is not covered — only complete failure or manufacturing defects.
Yes. Factory-direct manufacturers like TerraScrub provide direct technical support via email and WhatsApp. Parts are shipped from North America warehouses. The difference is that you or your local maintenance partner handle the installation of replacement parts. If you do not have in-house maintenance staff, a brand dealer with a service truck may be a better fit.
Some manufacturers offer extended warranty plans for 3-5 years at an additional cost. These typically cover the same components as the base warranty but for a longer period. Ask about the cost of the extension, what it excludes, and whether it is transferable if you sell the machine.
Common warranty-voiding actions include: skipping the scheduled maintenance, using non-approved cleaning chemicals, modifying the machine or control system, letting lead-acid batteries deep-discharge repeatedly, and damage from improper operation (like running over debris that cracks the squeegee or frame). Always read the warranty terms before operating the machine.
A good warranty does not mean the machine will never break. It means when something goes wrong — and something eventually will — you are not stuck with a $2,000 repair bill and a machine that sits idle for two weeks waiting for a part.
Factory-direct models from TerraScrub keep the process simple: one manufacturer, one contact, direct parts fulfillment. No dealer middleman, no runaround. If you want to see the actual warranty terms for any TerraScrub model, Donnie will send them to you — no sales pitch, just the document.
Contact Donnie for full warranty terms, extended coverage options, and support details.