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  • Florida Weekly - Palm Beach Edition

    Hidden charges in the service department

    By Staff,

    2024-07-18
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2JQFyz_0uV4e3F700

    This article first appeared in Florida Weekly on July 14, 2022.

    The last time you paid your bill for your car’s maintenance or repair, there was an extra, probably unnoticed charge at the bottom of the service invoice. This extra charge was not for the parts or labor performed on your car. If you noticed it at all, it was hidden at the bottom of the invoice near the line for sales tax.

    This service charge is the “little brother” of the infamous Dealer Fee, the hidden PRICE INCREASE that is added to the bottom of the bill of sale when you buy a car.

    Just like the dealer fee, this service charge is not really a fee at all; rather, it’s pure profit to the dealership or independent service facility. Just like the dealer fee, it too goes by many different names: “Sundry Supplies Fee,” “Miscellaneous Fee,” “Hazardous Waste Disposal Fee,” “Waste Oil Disposal Fee,” “Environmental Impact Fee,” etc. The “Waste Oil Disposal Fee” is particularly deceptive and dishonest because car dealers sell their waste oil to refiners for a tidy profit. Unfortunately, adding any arbitrary extra amount onto the price of auto service is completely legal in Florida! There also is no law requiring consistency in naming this extra charge or even in limiting the amount of that charge. If a car dealer wanted to name the fee CAR DEALER’S RETIREMENT FUND, it would be legal (and a lot more honest than Environmental Impact Fee).

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3slv9r_0uV4e3F700

    The size of this bogus fee is calculated as a percentage of the total legitimate parts and service charge you incurred and varies from as little as 5% to 10% and higher. Typically, there is a self-imposed “cap” on this phony charge so you don’t notice it when you pay your] bill at the cashier. Caps also vary from about $25 to $50. Remember that most people service their cars about every six months or 5,000 miles and keep their cars 6.5 years. If your average

    “hidden charge for service” was $15, over the course of ownership you would pay $195 for work that was never performed on your car! The average dealer fee in Florida is over $1,000, but a car dealer makes his money on the bogus service charge with volume. A car dealer may sell a few cars each day, but he or she may service dozens. Therefore, a car dealer “steals” far more money from a service customer than he does from car-buying customers.

    Auto service companies and car dealers know that this is wrong and expect some of their customers (those that are alert enough to catch it) to react angrily.

    Calls from these customers are what inspired me to write this column. One caller who was a regular reader of my column and called me to ask what the “sundry supply fee” for about $30 at the bottom of his service invoice at Sunrise Ford in Fort Pierce was. I explained it to him. By reacting angrily and threatening to take his service business elsewhere, he was able to have his $30 refunded.

    This is my recommendation to you: Always inspect the service invoice before you pay. If there is any charge on the invoice that you cannot recognize, ask for a complete explanation. The explanation you are likely to hear is that these are for “miscellaneous” supplies and costs the dealer incurs in repairing the average car, probably not yours.

    They will talk about nuts and bolts, screws, fasteners, grease solvent and maybe even “soap to wash the mechanic’s hands.” Of course, these are just normal overhead costs of doing business. They might just as well be charging you for their power and water bills or salary to their mechanics. You tell them that their costs of doing business should have been included in the price you were quoted for the labor and parts on your repair order, not sneakily tacked onto the bottom of the invoice when you were paying the cashier.

    The post Hidden charges in the service department first appeared on Palm Beach Florida Weekly .

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