I mean, you could theoretically calculate what the absolute best possible energy conversion you can get out of a gallon of gasoline is. There's your gallon of electricity.
I actually use that phrase, as a PHEV owner. My Prius Prime holds 11.something gallons of gasoline (10 usable if you don't want an ulcer with it telling you the tank is at zero) and 1/2 gallon of electricity. Every night that I plug it in, I "make a half gallon" for the price of 6.6 kWh. If I drive it in a manner to get 50mpg on gas (driving terribly, or going a steady 72mph) then I can go 25 miles without the engine coming on. If I drive to get 70mpg (driving very well, or going a steady 52mph) then I can go 35 miles on the electricity.
@@MrBlueBurd0451 That's basically what MPGe represents (miles per gallon equivalent) in the EPA website for gas mileage. No conversion losses though. It's a raw joules-to-joules conversion. Because different regions get their electricity from different sources, it's impossible to predict what conversion losses are involved when generating the electricity. So it's not exactly a fair comparison with gasoline. But the point of the mileage ratings is to provide a common base for comparison between cars (or EVs in this case). So the conversion losses don't matter (unless you're comparing an EV to to a gas vehicle).
There was an update on this, from Jalopnik: Hertz’s Customer Care team reached out to Mr. Lee to apologize and refunded this erroneous charge. All it took was some public flogging for justice to be served, apparently.
@@chivalryremains9426 I would argue that a refund and compensation are justice, and punitive damages are a corrective measure against future cases of the same sort.
Charging a "gas fee" *for a car that doesn't even have a gas tank* is blatant and explicit fraud. If I didn't know better, I would think that Hertz is TRYING to get sued!!!
It is "refueling" not a "gas fee." Either way the guy paid to not have to pay a "refueling fee" and he returned the vehicle with the same state of charge that it had when he left.
heh a buddy took his bmw in for service to a bwm dealership. got it hack in a hr 1\2 but was charged for 3 hrs of labor. sorry sir that's what the book says on how long it takes. dealership refused to budge. (edit) Amazing how many people are trying to justify time theft with mental gymnastics. Try punching in a time clock then not working. You'll be fired for cause. No wonder dealerships are going under
@@rhetorical1488I’ve been told they had to put multiple employees working on my car. I guess they had 6 techs spend 1/2 hour on it. 😂😂 realized the things they do are not hard. never again back to a dealership unless it’s warranty claims
There are business case studies out there telling companies there is no ROI on good customer service. The cost per new customer is less than making the existing customer happy, so onto the next sucker who hasn't read the news stories
Hertz use to have O J Simpson in their commercials. They should have rehired O J, after he was convicted for theft. That way he properly represented the company.
News agency where I used to live once did one of those investigative journalism pieces on rental companies. They would rent a car, go through the walk around and sign for it, and then leave the car on the rental lot and take the keys with them, never even entering the vehicle, only to "return" the rental vehicle the next day. They did it with like 5 rental company locations, and 3 of those locations charged the news team a "cleaning" fee, accusing them of smoking in the vehicle, as well as the refueling fee, even though the car never moved from it's parking spot, and no one even entered the car other than the associate that checked them out to get the milage and fuel state. Of course, those three rental locations waived the entire rental costs once the news story aired, but they argued the costs were owed all the way until the day the news crews showed up with the cameras and mics shoved in their faces with evidence that the car was never moved from its original spot.
God that reminds me once I was staying at a hotel and someone from the hotel came and knocked on the door to tell me I had been accused of smoking and they were just letting me know I would be charged extra and to please stop smoking. I asked him what he was talking about who accused me and what did someone accusing me have to do with the hotel? He just repeated himself. So I invited him into the room asked him if he smelled smoke or anything like that and pointed out that people accuse people of all sorts of shit that isn't true. I asked him of he was still going to charge me based on someone's suggestion that I was smoking when he was literally in the room and could see no smoking was happening? He apologized sheepishly and rushed out. I was not charged but man did that ruin my day.
@@DJdoppIer This was back in like... 2006. UA-cam had just became a thing, so I don't know if there is a video for it. I'm sure other news companies have done something similar though.
I just want to see what happens when one of their poorly repaired vehicles are in a serious collision. The body repairs on their cars is... uh... questionable at best. Source: know a guy that worked in a body shop that repaired fleet vehicles for a short time.
They’re practically out of business now. The president resigned after no one wants to rent an electric car, and he bought thousands of electric cars. So I guess they figured they’d make it up by robbing people with this nonsense?
Hertz in australia was charging for not returning the EV's at > 90% charge, when they had set the max battery level to be 90% so basically no car could be returned at that status
Rented a car from Hertz in FL, I asked about tolls and the agent said don’t worry about it we will just bill you. What they didn’t say was there is a $15 surcharge for each toll, so a for 75 cent toll I was charged $15.75. Hertz even convinced my CC company that it was a legitimate fee. I eventually filed a complaint with the FL attorney general and a year later got my money back.
Good for you for following through with that. Too many people (probably including me!) will just not bother to fight the issue through to the end. And then Hertz continues to get away with it.
Never trust anyone who says "We'll take care of it." Find out exactly what they mean. In the case of a rental car, read the contract. The company we rented a car from in Florida explained on their website how they handled tolls. At the time, there was more than one toll company in the state, as I recall. But the rental company (not Hertz; something costing less Dollars) had a way to make arrangements in advance to cover the various tolls. We did that, and had no problems.
@@EXROBOWIDOW Almost all toll companies have a way to take care of it in advance. It's kind of a hassle but the toll should never go to the rental company.
Possibly, but credit card issuers aren't always the greatest about that. They can have some rather interesting interpretations due to getting a slice of every transaction you put on their card.
@@dmdx86 I rented a van from Enterprise several years back and it had ~14 wrapped bricks of mexican marijuana stowed away under the seat compartments. Wouldn't even comp or credit me for the hours wasted time dealing with police. Every rental company is on my do not rent from list.
At this point, the upper management needs to face criminal fraud charges. What they have done and continue to do is well beyond, "just a mistake". Corporate fraud like this is dictated from the top! Get rid of their corporate shield against personal liability. As these corporate criminals continue their fraud against their customers, they are living up to their name: HURT Z!
this. not just hertz, it's happening at so many companies it's making life in general worse, and what do we have government for if not to make life better?
I went on 2 business trips to Dallas last year, my company REQUIRED me to rent from Hertz. Was terrified I'd get locked up for being in a "stolen" car the whole time.
There’s been an update to story. I read this yesterday also, in Jalopnik, and at the end of the story they said that once the news got involved that Hertz reversed the charge. At the end of the day this is just another reason to NEVER rent from Hertz and the last time I had to rent a car I purposely avoided them even if they were cheaper.
It's insane to need the news involved in a situation like this! The guy is a loyal customer and you can easily see that the charge is bogus yet they doubled down on it?!
Your story about the leasing company claiming falsified damage to their car reminds me of a story I read where a guy got scammed by a rental car company for alleged damage to the car he rented. The guy then rented from them again, and bought the "no liability for any damages of any kind no matter what reason" insurance package from the rental company. He then did his trip, and just before returning it, he took a hammer and smashed all of the panels on the car and cracked a window. The rental company then realized what insurance he had bought, and invited him to find other rental accommodations in the future.
"He WAS a loyal customer..." We just LOVE those idjit hertz people. Just wait until they send a bill for a rental you never got from them since you always watch Lehto's Law. PS I also love Enterprise car rentals.
@@otsigo Do Teslas burn more often than other electric cars, or is it just because there are so many that when an EV burns up it is just statistically likely to be a Tesla?
Reminds me of a comedian named Nazareth. He has a running story with Hertz, “the name states their experience” and “fill it up with gas, fill it up with gas”
I hope Hertz is studied in Business School. It used to be the number Rental car company, but some idiot CEO at some point must have really did a hatchet job on it. Should be full of good lessons on NOT what to do in business.
"The truth Hertz, doesn't it? Oh, sure, maybe not as much as jumping on a bicycle with the seat missing, but it Hertz!" -Lieutenant Frank Drebin, Police Squad
Idiocy quotient test applied. CEO hits 2 million idiot points,! flipping around this means his intelligence quotient is minus 67, ie everyone around him loses 67 IQ points until he leaves.
Lol you really think this was due to lack of intelligence? They know they can get more money out of customers, they know they won't face ANY consequences and they're nearly a monopoly. They're just playing the game the way the game is made to be played unfortunately.
Yea, last time I had a problem with a company it was DHL. A package I had shipped was attempting to enter the country without certain documentation. The agent left a voicemail on my phone (this was 2005), I called them back on more than one occasion and got their voicemail every time. When they finally deigned to call me back, it was the day after the customer deadline and they wanted me to pay them more money to ship it again. I asked to speak to a supervisor and was hung up on. I called back in to their customer line and eventually was talking to a very senior person who took care of it for me at least, but that kind of behavior by the lower level agent just soured me on the whole company.
The last car I rented was from Enterprise as well. They went over the car with me when I picked it up and when I dropped it off. No issues at all. Mind you I rarely rent a car, but I have been using Enterprise without any issues ever.
Wanna bet? Albert Einstein - "There are two things that are infinite. The Universe and Human Stupidity, and I'm not sure about the Universe." He was a smart man.
@@jilbertb Very convenient for you to blame the youngest generation that has had the least amount of influence on the state of the world for the state of the world, boomer.
So many companies have replaced their customer service with automated service making it impossible to logically resolve problems. Hertz has simply taken this to a new level.
Amazon. I received a padded envelope which had been sliced open and was empty. There is no way to report something like this to their automated "customer service" robot. They have a menu of possible delivery problems, but no option for "something else". And this was at one of their "Amazon Locker" which I use to protect against porch pirates. Fortunately, it was probably a small, inexpensive item and not worth the hassle of trying to contact a human.
IKR, I remember being on a chat with customer care a while ago for a subscription renewal that I hadn't been warned about and the agent just reiterated the policy without actually addressing that they were required to provide me with notice prior to charging my card for the renewal, not after and that they had to give the money back. To which the agent just quoted back their policy. IANAL, but I have had business law and your policy doesn't get to ignore the law in most cases. There are relatively specific things that you can do with a company policy and they don't permit fraud.
I can't imagine a credit card company that wouldn't reverse that charge when contested. And the Federal Trade Commission needs to be contacted as well as the state's Governor's Dept. of Consumers Affairs.
Since he accepted the "gas up to go" option, it is chargeable??? My guess is their system can't tell the difference between cars types on it's standard hire contract by make or model, so maybe a court case or two is necessary to affect change in either contract, or personal???
I rented a brand new Ford pickup from Enterprise for 7 days, unlimited mileage. I put almost 3,000 miles on it. (Hated the truck BTW) Before I returned it, I took it to the local car wash, and had it detailed, inside and out. Cost me about $90. I refilled the gas, literally, across the street from the rental office/lot. The clerk was nice, but a little "miffed" because there was NO DIRT inside or out, and the tank was so full, you could see "wetness" when you opened the tank. The truck was cleaner than when I got it. I loaded up that truck with my Mom's things she left behind when she moved to Fl. It was my Husband, me, and our Jack Russell AND my black cat.. We are BOTH smokers. Screw rental car companies, ALL OF THEM! For the price of a detail, we had a nice trip, we didn't have to worry about our pets or having to pull over to smoke. F*ck-em if they can't take a joke! 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
This reminds me of a time I visited my local Blockbuster back about 1999-2000ish and DVDs were just hitting the shelves. Some overeager employee had slapped those “Be Kind, Rewind” stickers on all the new DVDs. I mentioned it to the employee and he would not back down that DVDs had to be rewound before returning [lest you get charged a rewinding fee]. Fortunately, they never actually went so far as to try to charge me to rewind a DVD so at least they weren’t quite as dumb as Hertz.
Alamo in Orlando, FL is pretty good about having an actual person check they car back in and charging local fuel prices plus or minus a few cents to fill the car back up for you if it’s needed.
I don't get how Hertz hasn't been legally shut down by the authorities yet. When regular people file a false police report they go to jail. But when Hertz does it, no problemo?
The police report was not false, per se, when they filed it. When the car returned or was recovered the report should have been amended but that many changes might have caused states to amend the definitions of "stolen car" to not accept rental car company claims so quickly. And that would have crippled recovery rates on unreturned rentals.
I have always rented from Enterprise. I have rented from them dozens of times and have never had any issues. They are really excellent but a little more expensive but worth it.
No matter what they (insert company name) say, it can be resolved if you reach the correct person. ANYTHING can be done if approved by the right person. The trouble is getting to that person.
Avis and Budget have the same parent company and my husband’s company has a corporate deal with Avis (specifically). He can rent for family and for personal use with a similar rate, and it’s super helpful for us. A few years ago we were on Hawaii Island (aka Big Island) and when we went to return the rental to Avis, that side was closed, with a sign indicating to return it to the Budget side. We did, and the attendant walked around the car, checked the mileage, and handed us the receipt. We of course double-checked with him that we were supposed to returnit to Budget since Avis was closed, and he said yup, you’re all set. 2 days or so after we got home we got a notice (can’t remember if it was a phone call or email) that we hadn’t returned the car. My husband called Avis, spoke with a human, and explained what happened. He provided the receipt from the attendant, and after a little bit of insistance, they let it go. They must have eventually checked the Budget side of the lot and found it because we haven’t had any issues since then. We still use Avis.
In 2024, it’s like you can’t rely on a paper receipt to provide proof. I would have took a picture or video of the sign. I’ve learned to now always take a walk around video of the car when returning it. I do the same thing before driving the car off the lot. Been accused twice of returning a car with so called damage, but had a video showing that a bumper was already scuffed and one where a large door ding existed.
I rented a Tesla M3 for 30 days last summer from Hertz in LAX. Replaced it after 20 days because of a cracked windshield in LAS for a MY, free of charge. I had an absolute blast renting from Hertz, everything was without an issue. EXCEPT when I returned the Tesla with 76%, I got hit with a $30 recharge fee (even though it was >70%). They eventually removed it, but still, scummy.
A later story yesterday said Hertz will cancel the charge and was contacting the customer. He also asked about the refueling charge at rental time and was told it would also be applicable for charge.
Super. Hertz missed the boat. They should have billed customers $35.00 to plug in their gasoline powered automobiles and recharge the batteries. 💙 T.E.N.
The sign of a good company is how well it takes care of their customers when a problem occurs. Before I retired, I had complementary Hertz Gold because of the company I worked for yet I still normally used other companies. Like Steve, I had pretty good experience with Enterprise but there were a couple of others that did pretty well also. With Hertz, I just found that it rarely went as seemlessly as it was supposed to.
I would never rent from Hertz ever since they let a guy sit in prison for murder, due to mistaken identity, because they didn't want to turn over a record of him renting which was a solid alibi. (they ignored several court orders).
I have heard of Hertz doing this in the past, and the story has always been that the customer didn't understand that they can't leave the Tesla on the hotel charger all day/night without risking the idle penalty fees that come from Tesla when you block a spot when the station is at 50% capacity. $277 is low, I have read and heard Hertz/Tesla charging well over $1,000 when this happens. The "fueling" bill always comes after the fact as well. The last story I heard, Hertz also waived the fee because the customer didn't choose the EV, it was all that they had, and the agent didn't inform the EV newb customer about charging or the possible penalty fees for blocking a charging spot.
Budget rent a car definitely charges for a refill regardless of how you turn it in. At Denver Airport there is literally a gas station right down the street from the rental car drop off. I filled up and drove a mile, and was still charged for topping off the tank. Interestingly, the paperwork showed they filled the tank to more gallons than the tank is rated to hold.
I agree with you on Enterprise too. Never had anything but a good experience with them. And most of the times I've rented from them, it was at the Newark airport, and still never had to deal with BS about not being able to get what I requested, or overcharging or anything. The only time I ever get an additional charge from them, it's for using the Fastpass since I'm going into NYC. And that is perfectly fine and accepted.
Gotta wonder if the person detailing the vehicle pumped gasoline into their own car. I have to wonder if this would be a small claims court case eventually if Hertz doesn't back down?
This makes some sense in this senseless case. If the company has receipts of actual fuel being pumped, it wouldn't surprise me if an employee attached their bill to the paperwork. Or an employee attached the receipts to this Tesla renter's paperwork from another vehicle return.
@@davidtsang4949 none of this makes sense. They literally should have different check boxes for different types of vehicles they rent. Just a shoddy operation all around.
a Ford F450 has a 48 Gallon tank which at the current US average rate ($3.63) would cost $174.24 to gas it from completely empty. Using that same F450 tank size a fill costing $277 would be a price of $5.77 a gallon, which is high even for inflated airport prices and would likely get a state's AG looking at you. Should also note most cars the size of a Tesla are going to have a tank around 16 gallons, so the charge is even more insane when talking in terms of "even if the Tesla used gas", using a 16 gallon tank size they're asking for $17.31 a gallon........
Sad thing is, 5.77 would be a totally normal price here in California. They (state taxes and regulation costs) really stick it to us here. When Steve said "they would charge a $5/gal fee" I was thinking "Deal!"
Damn you, Steve! As a Canadian I had to pause the video to do the conversion from gallons of electricity (assuming US gallons vs Imperial gallons) to litres of electricity. It's my Saturday morning, I slept in and don't need math problems like this.
I've had a great experience with my local Hertz. I've rented three electric cars from Hertz, including a Tesla. Because Tesla's super chargers don't have a payment option, the charges are automatically sent to Hertz. There's a $200 hold at the time of the rental, and that is used to pay for the super charging stations. I'm assuming he used super charger stations and the $277 was the cost of the charging station.
At this point the FTC needs to do a thorough investigation on Hertz and its fraudulent and predatory practices. If anything, there need to be consumer protection laws in place for situations like this.
Unfair comment. Most of Boeing's supposed problems are caused by the mechanics at the airline, not with Boeing. Boeing is being trashed for a lot of problems that they did not cause.
Classic availability heuristic. Hertz rents over a million cars every month, and while it may be true that they have a disproportionate number of awful stories like this, that's a far cry from this being a common occurrence. The reality is that you could probably rent a new car from hertz every week for the rest of your life and never once have your rented car reported stolen nor have them apply such an absurd charge.
Hertz used to be the #1 car rental agency. Expensive, but top tier service. All the fortune 500 companies had corporate accounts with them. But they were floating a lot of debt, and had spent a lot of money upgrading their equipment just before the pandemic hit. That left them unable to make their debt payments, and they filed for bankruptcy in 2021. (Similar story with Pan Am actually.) What remains now is just a shell of a rental car company going through the motions (since they already had the infrastructure and name recognition). Good lesson in not having too much debt, which our government is now learning painfully. (Interest on the national debt now exceeds the Defense budget.)
"The bright side is he wasn't arrested"... wow, that was a hard slap in the face; "long time member means he's a sucker for punishment"; so many burns on them. Glad to hear he will just dispute the charge with the cc company.
I rented from Hertz just a couple of times before I swore them off forever. I think for most people there have got to be only a handful of such companies that wind up on their forever shit list. For me it's Hertz and U-haul, but there have been times when I've had to choose between the two and then I end up driving a box truck to work.
Most of times, you will have many options auto selected via your presidents club profile. IE gas. I have also had them change the terms after you leave before you return. They have so much automation in the process.
I have Enterprise rental here and last year I rented one for a week but drove it home and then back. Used less than a gallon of gas. They don’t top off the car when you get it so you don’t know what level it was when you rent it
@@catberts6499 They're working off a script. They wouldn't trip over words, they'd just read part of the script about the standard reason for that fee, regardless of whether it is relevant. If questioned again, they're either going to go in circles repeating irrelevant things, or just say it's what's listed in their records, therefore it's a fact.
Enterprise has always been my go to rental car company. They've never given me a problem with rental cars. Even Forbes and JD Powers gave Enterprise high marks in the rental car industry.
I just rented a car from hertz. I usually use enterprise but an airline i flew on had a hertz discount. The entire rental went smoothly. Sounds like i got lucky 😂 they did charge some BS refrigerant recovery fee though. I should have let all the r134a out before i returned it
Many years ago, I got a curtesy car, and when it went back, I got a bill for a tiny scratch on the bumper, luckily for me, the previous person left their condition report in the car. I sent that to the company, and never heard from them again.
Gallons of electricity, my new phrase of the day.
Shocking, isn't it 😂
I mean, you could theoretically calculate what the absolute best possible energy conversion you can get out of a gallon of gasoline is. There's your gallon of electricity.
At 20 gallons, that's $13.50 per gallon. I did not realize a gallon of electricity is $13.50. Unless it's California, it's $23.50.
I actually use that phrase, as a PHEV owner. My Prius Prime holds 11.something gallons of gasoline (10 usable if you don't want an ulcer with it telling you the tank is at zero) and 1/2 gallon of electricity. Every night that I plug it in, I "make a half gallon" for the price of 6.6 kWh.
If I drive it in a manner to get 50mpg on gas (driving terribly, or going a steady 72mph) then I can go 25 miles without the engine coming on. If I drive to get 70mpg (driving very well, or going a steady 52mph) then I can go 35 miles on the electricity.
@@MrBlueBurd0451 That's basically what MPGe represents (miles per gallon equivalent) in the EPA website for gas mileage. No conversion losses though. It's a raw joules-to-joules conversion. Because different regions get their electricity from different sources, it's impossible to predict what conversion losses are involved when generating the electricity. So it's not exactly a fair comparison with gasoline. But the point of the mileage ratings is to provide a common base for comparison between cars (or EVs in this case). So the conversion losses don't matter (unless you're comparing an EV to to a gas vehicle).
There was an update on this, from Jalopnik: Hertz’s Customer Care team reached out to Mr. Lee to apologize and refunded this erroneous charge. All it took was some public flogging for justice to be served, apparently.
They likely do this to thousands, and repay those who raise hell.
bump
a refund isnt justice. Punitive damages is justice.
@@chivalryremains9426 I would argue that a refund and compensation are justice, and punitive damages are a corrective measure against future cases of the same sort.
Did they also refund him for the bogus "return without refueling"fee
Charging a "gas fee" *for a car that doesn't even have a gas tank* is blatant and explicit fraud. If I didn't know better, I would think that Hertz is TRYING to get sued!!!
They need to rewrite their rental contracts to include EV's or have separate contracts for EV's.
It is "refueling" not a "gas fee." Either way the guy paid to not have to pay a "refueling fee" and he returned the vehicle with the same state of charge that it had when he left.
heh a buddy took his bmw in for service to a bwm dealership. got it hack in a hr 1\2 but was charged for 3 hrs of labor. sorry sir that's what the book says on how long it takes. dealership refused to budge.
(edit) Amazing how many people are trying to justify time theft with mental gymnastics. Try punching in a time clock then not working. You'll be fired for cause.
No wonder dealerships are going under
they committed insurance fraud on me too they claimed their SUV with a chipped windshield with 140k miles was my doing
@@rhetorical1488I’ve been told they had to put multiple employees working on my car. I guess they had 6 techs spend 1/2 hour on it. 😂😂 realized the things they do are not hard. never again back to a dealership unless it’s warranty claims
Their motto should be: "Doing business with us Hertz !"
oh, s'a nice one, lolz
Well done
Hertz is not wrong. There was absolutely no gas in that Tesla when he returned it. 😂
It took them pouring $277 worth of gas through the charging port and spilling onto the ground before they realized it was an electric car.
Tell me you never want me to rent from you ever, without telling me
"That'll be $270 for 90 gallons of electricity". Unless you rented it in California, it'll be $600
Can you imagine being Hertz PR and seeing this and going WTF. We lost a customer, got bad PR all for $270 for fueling up and electric car.
We here at Hertz do not have a PR department that we are aware of.
The way Hertz runs its business, the higher ups will fire the guy for charging $277. Because they didn’t charge $500.
Their PR algorithm likely reached the same conclusion as their customer service and billing algorithms.
Hertz doesnt care
There are business case studies out there telling companies there is no ROI on good customer service. The cost per new customer is less than making the existing customer happy, so onto the next sucker who hasn't read the news stories
Hertz use to have O J Simpson in their commercials. They should have rehired O J, after he was convicted for theft. That way he properly represented the company.
And now that he’s gone hopefully Hertz is soon to follow.
@@clintmatthews3500 They've got Tom Brady doing Hertz commercials. It might keep him out of the HOF.
I think they should rehire him now, apparently they are a braindead company.
Like minds 1st thing when I read title was "the curse of O.J." lmao
Spokesman egotiations underway with Jared from Subway..
“Saying Hertz is in the news is like saying there’s weather in Michigan.”
Steve is really worth it, just for the quotes.
I know, hilarious
"He returned it with the same number of gallons of electricity as he picked it up with" 🤣🤣🤣
I'm dead... LOL
Always keep pictures!
That's the first thing I thought of.
Hertz will NEVER put me in the driver's seat.
Why won't other companies do similar?
@@contradictorycrow4327because free markets are self correcting, but do not worry sororities are still soo exclusive bubo.
I feel your pain just over having an advert tagline of theirs imprinted on your brain.
@@contradictorycrow4327 If you come across proof of that, either send it to Steve or make your own video about it.
Me either.
News agency where I used to live once did one of those investigative journalism pieces on rental companies. They would rent a car, go through the walk around and sign for it, and then leave the car on the rental lot and take the keys with them, never even entering the vehicle, only to "return" the rental vehicle the next day. They did it with like 5 rental company locations, and 3 of those locations charged the news team a "cleaning" fee, accusing them of smoking in the vehicle, as well as the refueling fee, even though the car never moved from it's parking spot, and no one even entered the car other than the associate that checked them out to get the milage and fuel state. Of course, those three rental locations waived the entire rental costs once the news story aired, but they argued the costs were owed all the way until the day the news crews showed up with the cameras and mics shoved in their faces with evidence that the car was never moved from its original spot.
God that reminds me once I was staying at a hotel and someone from the hotel came and knocked on the door to tell me I had been accused of smoking and they were just letting me know I would be charged extra and to please stop smoking. I asked him what he was talking about who accused me and what did someone accusing me have to do with the hotel? He just repeated himself. So I invited him into the room asked him if he smelled smoke or anything like that and pointed out that people accuse people of all sorts of shit that isn't true. I asked him of he was still going to charge me based on someone's suggestion that I was smoking when he was literally in the room and could see no smoking was happening? He apologized sheepishly and rushed out.
I was not charged but man did that ruin my day.
Is there a UA-cam link for this?
So you got problem with capitalism?? 😂😂😂
And when are you gonna pay up on the $34 trillions you owe?? 💵💵😂😂😂
@@jpnewman1688 Market based economies have safeguards and penalties for fraud. That's the only way they function.
@@DJdoppIer This was back in like... 2006. UA-cam had just became a thing, so I don't know if there is a video for it. I'm sure other news companies have done something similar though.
I'm surprised that there isn't a lawyer that could sue this company out of business with all their shanigans
They settled the stolen car fiasco for $160m or so.
They'll just go bankrupt again. What they need to do is claw back executive compensation.
I just want to see what happens when one of their poorly repaired vehicles are in a serious collision. The body repairs on their cars is... uh... questionable at best. Source: know a guy that worked in a body shop that repaired fleet vehicles for a short time.
They’re practically out of business now. The president resigned after no one wants to rent an electric car, and he bought thousands of electric cars. So I guess they figured they’d make it up by robbing people with this nonsense?
@@aaadamt964you ain’t lying. I’m sure we’ve both heard similar short cuts took
Hertz in australia was charging for not returning the EV's at > 90% charge, when they had set the max battery level to be 90% so basically no car could be returned at that status
Seems like a genius scam.
Rented a car from Hertz in FL, I asked about tolls and the agent said don’t worry about it we will just bill you. What they didn’t say was there is a $15 surcharge for each toll, so a for 75 cent toll I was charged $15.75. Hertz even convinced my CC company that it was a legitimate fee. I eventually filed a complaint with the FL attorney general and a year later got my money back.
Good for you for following through with that. Too many people (probably including me!) will just not bother to fight the issue through to the end. And then Hertz continues to get away with it.
Never trust anyone who says "We'll take care of it." Find out exactly what they mean. In the case of a rental car, read the contract. The company we rented a car from in Florida explained on their website how they handled tolls. At the time, there was more than one toll company in the state, as I recall. But the rental company (not Hertz; something costing less Dollars) had a way to make arrangements in advance to cover the various tolls. We did that, and had no problems.
@@EXROBOWIDOW Almost all toll companies have a way to take care of it in advance. It's kind of a hassle but the toll should never go to the rental company.
That’s why I hate these companies. They also tell you what you want to hear and then sneak the charges later. They can’t mess with me using Amex.
Report it to the credit card company as a fraud charge, provide evidence, and let the credit company fight hertz.
True
Possibly, but credit card issuers aren't always the greatest about that. They can have some rather interesting interpretations due to getting a slice of every transaction you put on their card.
@@SmallSpoonBrigadeThey probably just keep the fees and refuse to pay the money out.
be funny if he used a Visa ... cuz Hertz wont fight the Vatican ... yes thats who owns that card
Hertz put me on a DO NOT RENT LIST for refusing to pay $465 i replied " THANK YOU"
A nice bit of irony here.
Hertz is on my "do not rent from" list because of these horror stories.
@@dmdx86 I rented a van from Enterprise several years back and it had ~14 wrapped bricks of mexican marijuana stowed away under the seat compartments. Wouldn't even comp or credit me for the hours wasted time dealing with police. Every rental company is on my do not rent from list.
At this point, the upper management needs to face criminal fraud charges. What they have done and continue to do is well beyond, "just a mistake". Corporate fraud like this is dictated from the top! Get rid of their corporate shield against personal liability. As these corporate criminals continue their fraud against their customers, they are living up to their name: HURT Z!
They sold older rental cars to folks, then reported those cars as stolen.
this. not just hertz, it's happening at so many companies it's making life in general worse, and what do we have government for if not to make life better?
@@satoau1 government never makes things better they screw up everything they touch
It starts with your congressional representatives. Vote wisely.
I have learned a lot from Steve. Number 1 lesson being never rent from Hertz.
The truth Hertz... 😂 this is enough material for a stand up comedy show. I laughed so hard, my tummy Hertz.
I rented a car from Hertz, no problems. Maybe I should have played the lottery that day.
That's how I would look at it. Lucky you
I went on 2 business trips to Dallas last year, my company REQUIRED me to rent from Hertz. Was terrified I'd get locked up for being in a "stolen" car the whole time.
The odds are definitely in favor of the Hertz house😊
You'd used up all your luck on Hertz, there wouldn't be any left for the lotto.
@@brianorca I didn't think that through thoroughly.
There’s been an update to story. I read this yesterday also, in Jalopnik, and at the end of the story they said that once the news got involved that Hertz reversed the charge. At the end of the day this is just another reason to NEVER rent from Hertz and the last time I had to rent a car I purposely avoided them even if they were cheaper.
It's insane to need the news involved in a situation like this! The guy is a loyal customer and you can easily see that the charge is bogus yet they doubled down on it?!
“was” a loyal customer
@@davidtsang4949 According to US corporations, loyalty is a piggy bank meant to be cracked open and cashed in.
@@davidtsang4949the problem is that due to all the hertz stories out there even getting your particular story looked at is becoming harder.
once the news was involved needs to go all the way to a court room....in each case
"I'll take 10 gallons of 60Hz please."
60 Hertz?
@@clintmatthews3500 - oh, you must be European so it’s 50Hz for you ;)
@@stevebabiak6997lolol no dude, you missed the pun! 60 Hz... Hz stands for Hertz... what is is company named?
Tesla makes three different chargers. Will that be 120, 240, or 480 volts? The 120 volt charger takes four times longer than the 480 volt charger.
Get 10 gallons of DC instead and it will fill faster.
Your story about the leasing company claiming falsified damage to their car reminds me of a story I read where a guy got scammed by a rental car company for alleged damage to the car he rented. The guy then rented from them again, and bought the "no liability for any damages of any kind no matter what reason" insurance package from the rental company. He then did his trip, and just before returning it, he took a hammer and smashed all of the panels on the car and cracked a window. The rental company then realized what insurance he had bought, and invited him to find other rental accommodations in the future.
Yeah. I'm pretty sure that is illegal.
I remember Jackass renting from a small independent place, stripping it for a demolition derby then returned it after the event…
"He WAS a loyal customer..." We just LOVE those idjit hertz people. Just wait until they send a bill for a rental you never got from them since you always watch Lehto's Law. PS I also love Enterprise car rentals.
This story shows exactly why no one should EVER pay for the "skip the pump" option, which is going to hurt Hertz even more long term.
Or just avoid Hertz completely.
Putting gas in a Tesla would really make it a fire hazard
More so than usual.
Or not putting it in.
@@otsigo Do Teslas burn more often than other electric cars, or is it just because there are so many that when an EV burns up it is just statistically likely to be a Tesla?
@soundspark that's a good question. I'd have to see that stats.
@soundspark Gas cars burn 10x more than EVs. But tesla burning equals scary EV equals clicks
He just needs to sue for breach of contract. Sue, for recommendation of the charges, the attorney's fees and mental anguish. He will win
Treble damages plus fees and costs should send a message.
Courts require you to exhaust administrative options before suing.
@@johndougan6129it won’t. Hertz has been sued to oblivion and they never learn or change.
They are fully exhausted
We're talking about California, I wouldn't guarantee anything
You will be glad to know that my UA-cam app advertising here in the UK proudly announced that your video was sponsored by Hertz.
so nice of them
Reminds me of a comedian named Nazareth. He has a running story with Hertz, “the name states their experience” and “fill it up with gas, fill it up with gas”
I would enjoy seeing Katie Porter grill the Hertz CEO on their business practices. 🙂
He’d most likely decline the interview request.
Yes, I'd like to see that too
RIP
Omg... she breaks out the white board, it's all over but the cryin. Lmao
I hope Hertz is studied in Business School. It used to be the number Rental car company, but some idiot CEO at some point must have really did a hatchet job on it. Should be full of good lessons on NOT what to do in business.
"The truth Hertz, doesn't it? Oh, sure, maybe not as much as jumping on a bicycle with the seat missing, but it Hertz!"
-Lieutenant Frank Drebin, Police Squad
O.J. did it.
@@thomasdeas1941 It's almost like OJ knifed everyone in the back.
But wait; maybe the rental customer had been farting in the car?
Hertz is in the news with great frequency.
(pun)
@@MonkeyJedi99 Not bad!
Mandatory IQ test for the Hertz CEO.
DEI gallons of electricity.
Idiocy quotient test applied.
CEO hits 2 million idiot points,!
flipping around this means his intelligence quotient is minus 67,
ie everyone around him loses 67 IQ points until he leaves.
It's a mid-level management problem. CEO doesn't know what check boxes are used in rental office web pages.
@@andiward7068 The buck stops with the CEO.
Lol you really think this was due to lack of intelligence? They know they can get more money out of customers, they know they won't face ANY consequences and they're nearly a monopoly. They're just playing the game the way the game is made to be played unfortunately.
Yea, last time I had a problem with a company it was DHL. A package I had shipped was attempting to enter the country without certain documentation. The agent left a voicemail on my phone (this was 2005), I called them back on more than one occasion and got their voicemail every time. When they finally deigned to call me back, it was the day after the customer deadline and they wanted me to pay them more money to ship it again. I asked to speak to a supervisor and was hung up on. I called back in to their customer line and eventually was talking to a very senior person who took care of it for me at least, but that kind of behavior by the lower level agent just soured me on the whole company.
The last car I rented was from Enterprise as well. They went over the car with me when I picked it up and when I dropped it off. No issues at all. Mind you I rarely rent a car, but I have been using Enterprise without any issues ever.
I don't know how far from peak stupid we are but we must be close.
Wanna bet?
Albert Einstein - "There are two things that are infinite. The Universe and Human Stupidity, and I'm not sure about the Universe."
He was a smart man.
Zoomers
(GenZ) 😂
"The two most common elements in the universe are hydrogen and stupidity."
Professor Stephen Hawking
Nov 5 is close - that might be it.
@@jilbertb Very convenient for you to blame the youngest generation that has had the least amount of influence on the state of the world for the state of the world, boomer.
So many companies have replaced their customer service with automated service making it impossible to logically resolve problems. Hertz has simply taken this to a new level.
Even when it isn't automated, they give employees scripts, and do not allow them to deviate even for obvious things like this.
Amazon. I received a padded envelope which had been sliced open and was empty.
There is no way to report something like this to their automated "customer service" robot.
They have a menu of possible delivery problems, but no option for "something else".
And this was at one of their "Amazon Locker" which I use to protect against porch pirates.
Fortunately, it was probably a small, inexpensive item and not worth the hassle of trying
to contact a human.
IKR, I remember being on a chat with customer care a while ago for a subscription renewal that I hadn't been warned about and the agent just reiterated the policy without actually addressing that they were required to provide me with notice prior to charging my card for the renewal, not after and that they had to give the money back. To which the agent just quoted back their policy. IANAL, but I have had business law and your policy doesn't get to ignore the law in most cases. There are relatively specific things that you can do with a company policy and they don't permit fraud.
At this stage Hertz is just trolling Steve
😂😂😂
When does Steve get sued by Hertz?
I can't imagine a credit card company that wouldn't reverse that charge when contested.
And the Federal Trade Commission needs to be contacted as well as the state's Governor's Dept. of Consumers Affairs.
"the same number of gallons of electricity" had me laughing.
They used gas for the generator to charge it 😂😂😂.
$277 dollars worth, too! LOL
ROFLMAO
ROFL
Sounds like a Democrat green energy plan!
ROFLMAO 😜😂😂 maybe coal or natural gas LoL 😜🤣😁
What automobile has a tank big enough to require $277 worth of gas even at California prices.
A Rouge employee and four friends....
Apparently, they pumped the passenger compartment full.
Even if its empty, midsize cars of 15 gallon tanks, that's about $18.50 a gallon, but they have always up-charged and gouged fuel charges.
Maybe some of these big trucks I see here in Texas?
They charge something like $10 a gallon.
Here's my take away. If you rent a Hertz electric vehicle, return in t with the trunk full of gas and bring the receipt.
Yes but I would recommend you send a copy of the receipt not the original.
Put it in the back seat so they can not claim they did not see it.
Since he accepted the "gas up to go" option, it is chargeable???
My guess is their system can't tell the difference between cars types on it's standard hire contract by make or model, so maybe a court case or two is necessary to affect change in either contract, or personal???
Lol
Or dont rent from Hertz
Great humour.
I rented a brand new Ford pickup from Enterprise for 7 days, unlimited mileage. I put almost 3,000 miles on it. (Hated the truck BTW)
Before I returned it, I took it to the local car wash, and had it detailed, inside and out. Cost me about $90.
I refilled the gas, literally, across the street from the rental office/lot.
The clerk was nice, but a little "miffed" because there was NO DIRT inside or out, and the tank was so full, you could see "wetness" when you opened the tank.
The truck was cleaner than when I got it.
I loaded up that truck with my Mom's things she left behind when she moved to Fl. It was my Husband, me, and our Jack Russell AND my black cat..
We are BOTH smokers.
Screw rental car companies, ALL OF THEM!
For the price of a detail, we had a nice trip, we didn't have to worry about our pets or having to pull over to smoke.
F*ck-em if they can't take a joke! 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
I didn’t know a gallon of electricty costs so much.
It is the container you need to put it in that cost so much, it is so hard to pour.
And how many gallons does it take??
This story should go on playlist "NEVER EVER EVER..." buy an RV, rent from Hertz, etc.
I saw an update yesterday that Hertz finally admitted that they were not as correct as they claimed to be and the guy was getting his money back.
This reminds me of a time I visited my local Blockbuster back about 1999-2000ish and DVDs were just hitting the shelves. Some overeager employee had slapped those “Be Kind, Rewind” stickers on all the new DVDs. I mentioned it to the employee and he would not back down that DVDs had to be rewound before returning [lest you get charged a rewinding fee]. Fortunately, they never actually went so far as to try to charge me to rewind a DVD so at least they weren’t quite as dumb as Hertz.
Alamo in Orlando, FL is pretty good about having an actual person check they car back in and charging local fuel prices plus or minus a few cents to fill the car back up for you if it’s needed.
I don't get how Hertz hasn't been legally shut down by the authorities yet. When regular people file a false police report they go to jail. But when Hertz does it, no problemo?
US is fascist. (Collusion between industry and government to the detriment of the people.)
They have money.😊
@@davidsmith385 lol yes good point I forgot that makes a difference
The police report was not false, per se, when they filed it. When the car returned or was recovered the report should have been amended but that many changes might have caused states to amend the definitions of "stolen car" to not accept rental car company claims so quickly. And that would have crippled recovery rates on unreturned rentals.
Hertz has lots of money, that's why.
When will they learn?
Don't grab the third rail
Don't kick a feeding bear
Dont use hertz
Pee on an electric fence?
@@MarkSparks-xd9yyI was gonna say don't whiz on the electric fence like in Ren and Stimpy.
I have always rented from Enterprise. I have rented from them dozens of times and have never had any issues. They are really excellent but a little more expensive but worth it.
Now that’s what I call high-quality H2O!
No matter what they (insert company name) say, it can be resolved if you reach the correct person. ANYTHING can be done if approved by the right person. The trouble is getting to that person.
That gave me a firm chuckle. When steve says "and rhat became a thing," you know theres some salt there.
Avis and Budget have the same parent company and my husband’s company has a corporate deal with Avis (specifically). He can rent for family and for personal use with a similar rate, and it’s super helpful for us. A few years ago we were on Hawaii Island (aka Big Island) and when we went to return the rental to Avis, that side was closed, with a sign indicating to return it to the Budget side. We did, and the attendant walked around the car, checked the mileage, and handed us the receipt. We of course double-checked with him that we were supposed to returnit to Budget since Avis was closed, and he said yup, you’re all set. 2 days or so after we got home we got a notice (can’t remember if it was a phone call or email) that we hadn’t returned the car. My husband called Avis, spoke with a human, and explained what happened. He provided the receipt from the attendant, and after a little bit of insistance, they let it go. They must have eventually checked the Budget side of the lot and found it because we haven’t had any issues since then. We still use Avis.
Avis all the way!
In 2024, it’s like you can’t rely on a paper receipt to provide proof. I would have took a picture or video of the sign. I’ve learned to now always take a walk around video of the car when returning it. I do the same thing before driving the car off the lot. Been accused twice of returning a car with so called damage, but had a video showing that a bumper was already scuffed and one where a large door ding existed.
OMG. Thank you for the laugh. It was much needed,
I rented a Tesla M3 for 30 days last summer from Hertz in LAX. Replaced it after 20 days because of a cracked windshield in LAS for a MY, free of charge. I had an absolute blast renting from Hertz, everything was without an issue. EXCEPT when I returned the Tesla with 76%, I got hit with a $30 recharge fee (even though it was >70%). They eventually removed it, but still, scummy.
A later story yesterday said Hertz will cancel the charge and was contacting the customer. He also asked about the refueling charge at rental time and was told it would also be applicable for charge.
Laughing so hard it hertz!!
You might want to stop that before you get arrested.
I can only hit the like button so many times. The joked are too good lol
“That Became A Thing”- can you tell the story of the “thing” it became? 10:20 . . . BTW “That Became A Thing” would be a great Steve Lehto tee shirt
“Low flying owls became a thing”
Super. Hertz missed the boat. They should have billed customers $35.00 to plug in their gasoline powered automobiles and recharge the batteries. 💙 T.E.N.
The sign of a good company is how well it takes care of their customers when a problem occurs. Before I retired, I had complementary Hertz Gold because of the company I worked for yet I still normally used other companies. Like Steve, I had pretty good experience with Enterprise but there were a couple of others that did pretty well also. With Hertz, I just found that it rarely went as seemlessly as it was supposed to.
I would never rent from Hertz ever since they let a guy sit in prison for murder, due to mistaken identity, because they didn't want to turn over a record of him renting which was a solid alibi. (they ignored several court orders).
6:53 "President of what?" --Snake Plisken
I have heard of Hertz doing this in the past, and the story has always been that the customer didn't understand that they can't leave the Tesla on the hotel charger all day/night without risking the idle penalty fees that come from Tesla when you block a spot when the station is at 50% capacity. $277 is low, I have read and heard Hertz/Tesla charging well over $1,000 when this happens. The "fueling" bill always comes after the fact as well. The last story I heard, Hertz also waived the fee because the customer didn't choose the EV, it was all that they had, and the agent didn't inform the EV newb customer about charging or the possible penalty fees for blocking a charging spot.
Budget rent a car definitely charges for a refill regardless of how you turn it in. At Denver Airport there is literally a gas station right down the street from the rental car drop off. I filled up and drove a mile, and was still charged for topping off the tank. Interestingly, the paperwork showed they filled the tank to more gallons than the tank is rated to hold.
Founder's son is Richard Hurtz also know as Dick Hurtz....for good reason! 🤣
That's funny
I agree with you on Enterprise too. Never had anything but a good experience with them. And most of the times I've rented from them, it was at the Newark airport, and still never had to deal with BS about not being able to get what I requested, or overcharging or anything. The only time I ever get an additional charge from them, it's for using the Fastpass since I'm going into NYC. And that is perfectly fine and accepted.
All my experiences have been positive with them as well.
Gotta wonder if the person detailing the vehicle pumped gasoline into their own car. I have to wonder if this would be a small claims court case eventually if Hertz doesn't back down?
This makes some sense in this senseless case. If the company has receipts of actual fuel being pumped, it wouldn't surprise me if an employee attached their bill to the paperwork. Or an employee attached the receipts to this Tesla renter's paperwork from another vehicle return.
That's my guess. Employee theft.
The insane part of it is that the guy paid for the Skip the Pump option. All of this should be moot!
@@davidtsang4949 none of this makes sense. They literally should have different check boxes for different types of vehicles they rent. Just a shoddy operation all around.
More than likely Hertz has a forced arbitration clause in their contract...
Stories like this makes my brain Hertz.
His first mistake was being a "loyal Hertz customer" after all their antics.
a Ford F450 has a 48 Gallon tank which at the current US average rate ($3.63) would cost $174.24 to gas it from completely empty. Using that same F450 tank size a fill costing $277 would be a price of $5.77 a gallon, which is high even for inflated airport prices and would likely get a state's AG looking at you.
Should also note most cars the size of a Tesla are going to have a tank around 16 gallons, so the charge is even more insane when talking in terms of "even if the Tesla used gas", using a 16 gallon tank size they're asking for $17.31 a gallon........
Tesla would likely have a 3 gallon tank based on energy usage per mile which gets you $92.33 per gallon .
If state's AG actually gave a damn Hertz would not be in business.
Sad thing is, 5.77 would be a totally normal price here in California. They (state taxes and regulation costs) really stick it to us here.
When Steve said "they would charge a $5/gal fee" I was thinking "Deal!"
Damn you, Steve! As a Canadian I had to pause the video to do the conversion from gallons of electricity (assuming US gallons vs Imperial gallons) to litres of electricity. It's my Saturday morning, I slept in and don't need math problems like this.
Multiply by 3.78
Since "of electricity" is on both sides, even though it's nonsense we can ignore it.
🤣
It's about 800 liters of electricity.. that's in metric 230 Volt, not 120, obviously.
Wait ac/dc?! Its important aswell
@@1988nProud Oh, now your just being mean. It hertz.
Hertz needs to change the spelling of their name to Hurtz...
I've had a great experience with my local Hertz. I've rented three electric cars from Hertz, including a Tesla. Because Tesla's super chargers don't have a payment option, the charges are automatically sent to Hertz. There's a $200 hold at the time of the rental, and that is used to pay for the super charging stations.
I'm assuming he used super charger stations and the $277 was the cost of the charging station.
At this point the FTC needs to do a thorough investigation on Hertz and its fraudulent and predatory practices. If anything, there need to be consumer protection laws in place for situations like this.
I saw the thumbnail before the title and immediately said "Hertz" 😂
Sounds like they mixed up VIN numbers or customers and refusing to double check.
Hertz is having its Boeing moment
DEI moment⁉️🔥
@@equallawandorder5393DEI didn’t build those planes, and DEI isn’t the demographic of Hertz corporate. Can’t blame us for what your people are doing.
Unfair comment. Most of Boeing's supposed problems are caused by the mechanics at the airline, not with Boeing. Boeing is being trashed for a lot of problems that they did not cause.
Who's been ended!?
@@dadskrej5226it's not airline whistle-blowers dying though is it
I've been renting from Avis for over a decade. Hundreds of cars, never any major issues.
Some locations are better than others, but most are well run.
when you go to jail because Hertz made a mistake about a stolen car can't you sue them for a lot of money on their mistake
'Gallons of electricity?' That's a new one.
"The man is a loyal Hertz customer."
....dude knew what he was getting into.
I can't say I feel for him.
Classic availability heuristic. Hertz rents over a million cars every month, and while it may be true that they have a disproportionate number of awful stories like this, that's a far cry from this being a common occurrence. The reality is that you could probably rent a new car from hertz every week for the rest of your life and never once have your rented car reported stolen nor have them apply such an absurd charge.
That's the most surprising thing in the whole video. Who in the world would still be a loyal Hertz customer after all of The problems they've had
Hertz used to be the #1 car rental agency. Expensive, but top tier service. All the fortune 500 companies had corporate accounts with them. But they were floating a lot of debt, and had spent a lot of money upgrading their equipment just before the pandemic hit. That left them unable to make their debt payments, and they filed for bankruptcy in 2021. (Similar story with Pan Am actually.) What remains now is just a shell of a rental car company going through the motions (since they already had the infrastructure and name recognition).
Good lesson in not having too much debt, which our government is now learning painfully. (Interest on the national debt now exceeds the Defense budget.)
Unfortunately there’s next to no loyalty towards anything now a days.
Wow!!! I'm speechless.
"The bright side is he wasn't arrested"... wow, that was a hard slap in the face; "long time member means he's a sucker for punishment"; so many burns on them. Glad to hear he will just dispute the charge with the cc company.
I rented from Hertz just a couple of times before I swore them off forever. I think for most people there have got to be only a handful of such companies that wind up on their forever shit list. For me it's Hertz and U-haul, but there have been times when I've had to choose between the two and then I end up driving a box truck to work.
The police should charge Hertz for the cost of responding to false car stops
Never forget this word association ; Hertz = Hurts !
Back in the day when the mafia was more able and publicly available, none of this would ever happen
Ever heard of the dark web?
@@mattneil1449 not the same lol
Most of times, you will have many options auto selected via your presidents club profile. IE gas. I have also had them change the terms after you leave before you return. They have so much automation in the process.
I have Enterprise rental here and last year I rented one for a week but drove it home and then back. Used less than a gallon of gas. They don’t top off the car when you get it so you don’t know what level it was when you rent it
He should have asked, on recording : "how can I avoid this fee in the future"?...
Yeah, like to see them trip over their words
@@catberts6499 They're working off a script. They wouldn't trip over words, they'd just read part of the script about the standard reason for that fee, regardless of whether it is relevant. If questioned again, they're either going to go in circles repeating irrelevant things, or just say it's what's listed in their records, therefore it's a fact.
It's truth in advertising. It's definitely going to Hertz. Kind of that extremely lower back pain. Not unlike tax pain. President of Hertz Ben Dover.
"gallons of electricity" gotta make you smile a little
Enterprise has always been my go to rental car company. They've never given me a problem with rental cars. Even Forbes and JD Powers gave Enterprise high marks in the rental car industry.
I just rented a car from hertz. I usually use enterprise but an airline i flew on had a hertz discount. The entire rental went smoothly. Sounds like i got lucky 😂 they did charge some BS refrigerant recovery fee though. I should have let all the r134a out before i returned it
Many years ago, I got a curtesy car, and when it went back, I got a bill for a tiny scratch on the bumper, luckily for me, the previous person left their condition report in the car. I sent that to the company, and never heard from them again.