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Transportation

Some People Who Rented a Tesla from Hertz Were Still Charged for Gas (thedrive.com) 195

"Last week, we reported on a customer who was charged $277 for gasoline his rented Tesla couldn't have possibly used," writes the automotive blog The Drive.

"And now, we've heard from other Hertz customers who say they've been charged even more." Hertz caught attention last week for how it handled a customer whom it had charged a "Skip the Pump" fee, which allows renters to pay a premium for Hertz to refill the tank for them. But of course, this customer's rented Tesla Model 3 didn't use gas — it draws power from a battery — and Hertz has a separate, flat fee for EV recharges. Nevertheless, the customer was charged $277.39 despite returning the car with the exact same charge they left with, and Hertz refused to refund it until after our story ran. It's no isolated incident either, as other customers have written in to inform us that it happened to them, too....

Evan Froehlich returned the rental at 21 percent charge, expecting to pay a flat $25 recharge fee. (It's ordinarily $35, but Hertz's loyalty program discounts it.) To Froehlich's surprise, he was hit with a $340.97 "Skip the Pump" fee, which can be applied after returning a car if it's not requested beforehand. He says Hertz's customer service was difficult to reach, and that it took making a ruckus on social media to get Hertz's attention. In the end, a Hertz representative was able to review the charge and have it reversed....

A March 2023 Facebook post documenting a similar case indicates this has been happening for more than a year.

After renting a Tesla Model 3, another customer even got a $475.19 "fuel charge," according to the article — in addition to a $25 charging fee: They also faced a $125.01 "rebill" for using the Supercharger network during their rental, which other Hertz customers have expressed surprise and frustration with. Charging costs can vary, but a 75-percent charge from a Supercharger will often cost in the region of just $15.
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Some People Who Rented a Tesla from Hertz Were Still Charged for Gas

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  • I have to assume those in charge knew the run up TSLA stock would have had, and the subsequent impact it would then face. They likely made money playing it both ways, before and after.
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

      More likely they were sold on the "cheap operating costs" narrative that was really popular until a few years ago. The idea behind it was solid, EVs are pretty simple machines compared to ICEs. No gearbox, no complex oil, cooling and fuel flow systems, etc.

      Reality of course ended up being the opposite, with cost of ownership being higher. In part because of EVs being made on IT gadget model rather than automotive model, meaning they're not repairable when something goes wrong. Early on manufacturers were pr

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward
        Mostly lies 2/10
        • They are cheap to maintain though, I have owned three of them. Two Model Xs and a Model 3. total miles around 350k between all cars. I can tell you the maintenance costs are negligible and the repair costs are lower than you'd expect. Before I bought the first car, I was curious. I owned a few Mercedes ML and GLE cars prior. I called Mercedes and asked the replacement cost of a head unit (main radio with nav, touch screen). The dealership said $2200. I asked about the windshield, $1300. I then called Tesla,
      • by ukoda ( 537183 ) on Monday May 20, 2024 @05:24AM (#64484557) Homepage
        Sorry, calling bullshit on "EVs being made on IT gadget model". All new cars, including all ICEVs, are "being made on IT gadget model". EVs just lead the curve, but the industry was heading there anyway.

        "A fairly new EV that was rapid charged to full every day"? Who the fuck does that without a good reason? BEV owners will normally charge where the car spends most its time parked, at home or the office, as that is way cheaper that rapid charging.

        "battery fire risk"? This has only been an issue with factory manufacturing errors. There have been plenty of ICEVs that than been a fire risk over the years due to factory manufacturing errors.

        BEVs being the 'new thing' is serving as an excuse for all sorts of commercial hi-jinks. Much of it will pass. The stuff that remains was due to happen to ICEVs anyway. In this respect I agree with your points about how to value old BEVs and their battery state and repairing them instead of ripping them out.

        Indeed this is something I'm looking at with my mum's old first gen Nissan Leaf. It has a crap battery with short range but is otherwise low mileage and mint condition. We are not worried about it now as for an 85 year old driver it is a perfectly fine car for her needs. However when she stops driving we have to decided what to do with it. Given its mint condition I want to put a new battery in it and I'm tempted to DIY the job as the cells are getting pretty cheap these days. I would rather pay some to do it but we are still in that bullshit phase of the 'new thing' where replacement BEV batteries are completely unrelated to the actual cost. I guess it will simply come down to if that market has matured before she stops driving.

        Looking back it reminds me of the early days of VCR where everyone was worried about the heads wearing out and costing more than a new VCR to replace. Within a generation or two the design and cost of VCR heads improved to the point no one gave it a second thought.
        • by shilly ( 142940 ) on Monday May 20, 2024 @06:12AM (#64484633)

          Based on "mum" and "mint", I'm guessing you're in the UK. In which case, Cleevely are well thought of for battery pack replacements. I've never used them myself, because nothing's gone wrong with my EVs, but they have a solid reputation.
          Prices and details here for you:
          https://www.cleevelyev.co.uk/b... [cleevelyev.co.uk]

          They've done some videos on battery replacements so you can see what you'd need to do if you did it yourself. You're a braver man than me even to think of doing it!

          https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

          • by ukoda ( 537183 )
            Thanks for that, I'm actually in New Zealand but there has been some local work on making Leaf replacement packs here as we have a lot of old Leafs on the road here. The cells that caught my eye were like these https://www.aliexpress.com/ite... [aliexpress.com], but yes, it is not something to be under taken lightly. My direct experience to date has been with OSET 24.0R battery packs.
            • by shilly ( 142940 )

              Ah, my bad for not guessing that right! Oh well, the Cleevely folks are friendly, you could always ping them for some advice and see if they'll give it

              • by ukoda ( 537183 )
                All good, by language alone very hard to tell Kiwis from Brits. I will look at the Cleevely floks when the time comes. Not doing anything much yet as it really hard to tell how much longer mum will drive for. She is at that age where she is losing confidence in driving but doesn't want to lose independence, so could be a year or two yet. A long time in battery options evolution.
        • "A fairly new EV that was rapid charged to full every day"? Who the fuck does that without a good reason? BEV owners will normally charge where the car spends most its time parked, at home or the office, as that is way cheaper that rapid charging.

          This story is about rental cars, not personally owned cars.

          You're not going to get a charger installed at home for use by a rental car, and if you've rented a car it probably means you aren't at home in the first place. Rental cars will be charged on commercial chargers most of the time, or at hotels perhaps if the hotel happens to provide a charger.

          Plus someone who rents a car isn't going to care about preserving battery health.

          • This story is about rental cars, not personally owned cars.

            Sure, but the point needs addressed, and the conversation drifted that way.

          • by ukoda ( 537183 )
            Valid point but the post I was responding you was making a general statement about BEVs that was widely misleading.

            I would agree that rental vehicle batteries will need replace sooner than normal but it costs, even today, should not be that bad if they do things right. The new volume price of the cells in a Tesla model 3 is probably around $8K currently if you do a full replacement. For individual owners that is not going the be what you pay but for a large fleet operator it should be possible to get c
        • Sorry, calling bullshit on "EVs being made on IT gadget model". All new cars, including all ICEVs, are "being made on IT gadget model". EVs just lead the curve, but the industry was heading there anyway.

          It's first generation EV's (disregarding the early 1900's EVs)

          Expecting them to be completely reduced to practice in the first stab is not realistic.

          Also, we must separate the EV from Musk's cult of personality. Much of what he has done is detrimental to the EV platform.

          "battery fire risk"? This has only been an issue with factory manufacturing errors. There have been plenty of ICEVs that than been a fire risk over the years due to factory manufacturing errors.

          For all of the handwringing and gnashing of teeth and tearing of garments when an EV catches fire, there is the strange lack of concern that Internal Combustion vehicles catch fire and burn every day. A simple DDG image search will show

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by olddoc ( 152678 )
        Body damage is also very expensive to repair in a Tesla due to the aluminum monocoque construction. If there is an accident that impinges on battery components it may require very expensive replacements. This leads insurance companies to write off the vehicles. The high cost of ownership for Teslas is partly due to insurance. This might hurt Hertz if cars are out of service for a long time waiting on limited repair facilities.
        • by Rei ( 128717 ) on Monday May 20, 2024 @06:15AM (#64484641) Homepage

          Teslas are not aluminum monocoque. Thanks for playing.

          Like all cars, they're made from a mix of metals [electrek.co]. I can only assume that you're thinking of the gigacastings, which are deep interior components, and if you're damaging one beyond usage, you've utterly obliterated your car already. They're not crush structures; the crush structures are mounted to them. They're also not the only main structural elements. The pillars for example are UHSS (ultra-high strength steel). But you're generally not going to be replacing or welding UHSS either. Once again, Tesla is not at all unique in this regard.

          And technically you could fix mangled gigacastings, with body pulling. But body pulling isn't recommended on any monocoque car, only body-on-frame, as force transfer in monocoques is unpredictable.

          As for "impinging on battery components", again, the battery is nestled between the gigacastings, making it even more internal. If you're penetrating that deep into the car, you're already talking about a writeoff.

          People seem to have these weird images in their head of cars that are utterly mangled just being fixed for a practical price. That doesn't happen. Cars have outer panels and crush structures that are designed to be repaired / replaced. If you're penetrating deeper than that into primary structural members, the insurance is just going to write the car off.

          Lastly: I have a Tesla. There is no "high cost of insurance". It's perfectly reasonably priced for a car of its price.

          • by olddoc ( 152678 )
            Perhaps I was being a bit disingenuous. Teslas, like most modern cars, are unibody construction and mostly made of aluminum. As distinct from body on frame which is relegated to pickup trucks these days. I've been reading about problems with used rental fleet Teslas and this story came up: https://futurism.com/man-buys-... [futurism.com] A person bought a used rental car and there was a hole in the underbody causing battery damage. Lastly I have owned four Teslas since 2015. My current Tesla is very expensive to insure a
        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

          It hurts everyone if the car is out, because in most insurance plans insurance has to pay for a replacement vehicle for the duration of the car being away from the owner.

          Body damage in Tesla is notoriously bad, but really not quite as bad as reputation suggests. While yes the construction is quite dumb in terms of being crash repairable, you can still replace most of the panels, if at premium. The main problem is the battery. Even the small dings in otherwise uneventful small crash can and usually do lead t

      • by Rei ( 128717 ) on Monday May 20, 2024 @05:44AM (#64484593) Homepage

        Meanwhile the entire Model 3 rear drive unit and suspension can be removed with just four bolts and a couple connectors [ytimg.com], but you tell yourself whatever you want. And there were parts shortages in the first like 6-12 months as production ramped, but haven't been in a long time. The only thing you might have a shortage on is something new like the Cybertruck.

        Batteries are not consumables. They're designed to last similar lifespans to engines + transmissions. They're warrantied for 8 years / 200k km, and you don't warranty something that you expect to die the day after warranty, or half the failures will be under the warranty period. And if you replaced an engine and a transmission, at a dealership, with a brand new one, that wouldn't exactly be cheap either. You get a better deal with third parties and salvage parts, and the same applies to EVs.

        The main source of depreciation of EVs is simply how much better EVs keep getting and how quickly it's happening.

        Insurance companies do not "insist that even a small ding in battery cover should lead to a total battery replacement". This is entirely made up. Nor are EV premiums "insane levels".

        Just utter tripe.

        • After putting 117K miles on a 2018 Tesla Model 3, I can confirm everything in this statement is true.
        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

          This slightly modded LLM copy pasta just keeps going.

          "EVs don't have problems. Also EVs so don't have problems, that they're losing value because new EVs are just so much better than the old ones!"

          P.S. If where ever you are, insurance companies haven't yet caught up to insurance premiums on EVs matching actual costs for lithium fire risks and collateral damage they cause, start budgeting for it. It's coming. The question isn't "if", it's "when".

          Don't be the people who's premiums go up 50% a year for several

          • by test321 ( 8891681 ) on Monday May 20, 2024 @07:38AM (#64484731)

            I understood you are talking about price of insurance and suggested to look up in local languages. I looked up for France:
            * https://leocare.eu/fr/assuranc... [leocare.eu] Insurance comparison website, says it's down to 50% less expensive to insure an EV (Oct 2023) [actual numbers
            * https://www.automobile-magazin... [automobile-magazine.fr] Says it's average 12% less expensive to insure an EV, down to 33% less expensive (Nov 2023)
            * https://www.mma.fr/assurance-a... [www.mma.fr] MMA, one of the big insurers in France, says it gives direct 10% discount on EV as compared to equivalent ICE (as of now).

            The situation could have changed over time, as this article from 2021 citing "les furets" says it's more expensive to insure an EV (in 2021), while the "les furets" study from 2023 quoted above is the one saying it's now 12% less expensive than ICE.
            * https://www.challenges.fr/econ... [challenges.fr]

            • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

              >If where ever you are, insurance companies haven't yet caught up to insurance premiums on EVs matching actual costs for lithium fire risks and collateral damage they cause, start budgeting for it. It's coming. The question isn't "if", it's "when".

              Yes, those would be old numbers. Most jurisdictions are catching up, with prices going up mainly in 2023 and 2024. Before that, Big EV lobby made the argument you see all over this thread. That this isn't an issue, and it doesn't need addressing, because EV fir

      • More likely they were sold on the "cheap operating costs" narrative that was really popular until a few years ago. The idea behind it was solid, EVs are pretty simple machines compared to ICEs. No gearbox, no complex oil, cooling and fuel flow systems, etc.

        Reality of course ended up being the opposite, with cost of ownership being higher. In part because of EVs being made on IT gadget model rather than automotive model, meaning they're not repairable when something goes wrong.

        Before we go too far into this, we must acknowledge that oil and oil based energy sources are not in infinite supply, And synthetic fuels are going to be nasty expensive. So I always challenge people to come up with their solutions to personal transportation.

        There is nothing that would prevent an EV from being much more repairable than an ICE powered vehicle. Modularize everything, repairs are just replacing module C or what have you. Module goes back and is recycled or repaired.

        And regular vehicles ca

        • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

          Mass market ICE's do not have parts where the single part will exceed the price of the entire vehicle as it ages. Mass market EVs do.

          Which is why you have to attach rockets to goal posts and fire them off to get to a 30k engine in a low production performance car to reach parity with mass market EVs. Honestly I'm disappointed. You could've gone with supercar engines for even more zeroes at the end of the cost of the ICE engine.

          • Are you trolling or really so stupid?

            When a garage screwed up the belt replacement on my older car, it was an instant write off.
            Because that wrong belt timing caused a head-crash (cylinder heads hit the valves) and totalled the engine.
            Even a second hand engine did cost more then the entire value of that car.
            • Are you trolling or really so stupid? When a garage screwed up the belt replacement on my older car, it was an instant write off. Because that wrong belt timing caused a head-crash (cylinder heads hit the valves) and totalled the engine. Even a second hand engine did cost more then the entire value of that car.

              I dunno - I'd love to see a breakdown of the single point failure on all EVs that makes it cheaper to buy a new one.

              Which is of course to say, I'm pretty skeptical of the claim.

          • Mass market ICE's do not have parts where the single part will exceed the price of the entire vehicle as it ages. Mass market EVs do.

            Which is why you have to attach rockets to goal posts and fire them off to get to a 30k engine in a low production performance car to reach parity with mass market EVs. Honestly I'm disappointed. You could've gone with supercar engines for even more zeroes at the end of the cost of the ICE engine.

            So is it your premise then that every single EV produced has a single point of failure that renders the vehicle worthless?

            My point, which you choose to grandiloquently ignore is that you claim this universal attribute of all EV's, yet fail to provide any proof other than us relying on your statement.

            Prove it, homie, All EV's. Do you see the trap I set?

        • i personally would love to see hydrogen cars, as they're hauling around less weight--no giant battery. As a result, the roads get less torn up.
          Of course, the technology for fuel cells isn't here yet, but I'd love to see solar farms producing hydrogen as a form of energy storage when excess capacity exceeds grid need.
      • by laird ( 2705 )

        In reality, fleet owners report that EVs cost half as much to maintain, onn average, as comparable ICE vehicles.

        Similarly wrong, EV batteries are typically lasting a lot longer than the cars they are in, that's not a "consumable". Recurrent's survey of 15k EV owners reports a 1.5% lifetime battery failure rate, and most of those were covered by warranty, meaning that EV batteries aren't a "consumable", they're far more reliable than ICE engines and transmissions. And ICE vehicle owners don't treat the engin

    • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Monday May 20, 2024 @08:14AM (#64484813)

      I have to assume those in charge knew the run up TSLA stock would have had, and the subsequent impact it would then face. They likely made money playing it both ways, before and after.

      This has nothing to do with the EV program. It's just the latest in a long line of Hertz's embarrassingly incompetent customer service program. They've been doing stupid shit with gas vehicles for a decade already.

  • by Bruce66423 ( 1678196 ) on Monday May 20, 2024 @03:01AM (#64484415)

    That might discourage such 'mistakes' quite fast... ;)

  • by Kokuyo ( 549451 ) on Monday May 20, 2024 @03:37AM (#64484455) Journal

    Well, hard to reach support and wrongly billed services, that is.

    I think the above combination is not an accident but a business model. Hertz seems to be testing how blatantly they can do it and how high the the wrongly billed amount can be for people to just accept it and not bother make a stink.

    In a country with a working judiciary and legislative, this behavior would grant the CEO straight to jail, do not pass go, do not collect 200 ticket.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Also, how is not filling it up charged at $340? Of course we have fees for refuelling in Europe, but legally they can't just make it some arbitrary fine, it has to be at least plausibly related to the cost to them.

      • Also, how is not filling it up charged at $340? Of course we have fees for refuelling in Europe, but legally they can't just make it some arbitrary fine, it has to be at least plausibly related to the cost to them.

        It's a service and a convenience. If you don't want to pay for it, you can fuel the car yourself before return. No charge.

        For myself, I'd be quite happy to refuel it myself. Most times I've travelled, I'm driving the rental for a couple weeks so I have to refill it at certain points anyhow.

        Is it stupid? of course.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          Yeah, I guess it's EU consumer protection rules. Additional charges have to be reasonable and in line with actual costs. If they want more money they can load it onto the base rental cost.

          • In the US, for renting gasoline powered vehicles [with any of the majors like Hertz, Enterprise, Budget, Avis etc], there's 3 options.
            you can pay ahead for an entire tank of gas, at a slightly discounted rate vs what it would cost at a gas station. You'd have to run it to near empty to be worthwhile.
            You can fill up yourself just before you get to the airport/rental-counter.
            if you choose neither, you get a punitive rate, but it's supposed to be an ungodly amount per gallon... not per tank.

            What I'm trying to

            • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

              I don't want this to come over wrong but it's another example of how many Americans can't even imagine the kind of consumer friendly rules that the EU puts in place.

              The general principle is that businesses are in a strong position compared to the consumer, so there is a big responsibility to be fair. As an example, airlines are not allowed to advertise a fake price that doesn't include taxes and other fees that the customer has no choice but to pay. They also have to make it extremely clear what baggage all

              • I don't want this to come over wrong but it's another example of how many Americans can't even imagine the kind of consumer friendly rules that the EU puts in place.

                Well, that's great if you like being controlled. And while consumer protection doesn't sound bad, we dumb old Americans are noticing that there is hella lot more than consumer protection.

                I do enjoy the deep concern that our EU brethren have for their American cousins being completely abused at every turn. You'd think we'd show more gratitude.

          • Yeah, I guess it's EU consumer protection rules. Additional charges have to be reasonable and in line with actual costs. If they want more money they can load it onto the base rental cost.

            It's a different thing - European people like having every aspect of their life under government control. And that is okay if you like that sort of thing.

            But really, if a service is too expensive for a person, they are free to not make use of it. I rent U-Hauls fairly often. They have a charge for refueling if I don't want to fill it. It isn't 340.00 but there is a premium attached to the refilling. So I just stop at the gas station a mile away, and fill it.

            It really isn't even a problem. A person not wa

    • by ukoda ( 537183 ) on Monday May 20, 2024 @05:37AM (#64484585) Homepage
      Yes, this is very much a USA thing with their weak consumer protection laws. In most democratic countries Hertz would address such errors real quick and put in place systems to stop it happening again to avoid the shit load to trouble that they would be in otherwise.

      I have never been able to understand how in the USA, a supposed democracy, the voting population has never bothered to get their consumer protection laws sorted out? The reason most democratic countries have laws to protect consumers is because politicians worked out supporting such laws is a vote winner.
      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward

        I have never been able to understand how in the USA, a supposed democracy, the voting population has never bothered to get their consumer protection laws sorted out?

        Because the US is actually a representative republic with a massive un-elected bureaucracy, when do get representatives who support such measures, the result invariably winds up being yet-another-federal-agency that is more concerned with increasing its own power and budget rather than fulfilling the originally intended purpose. These agencies eventually devolve into little more than federally-funded jobs programs, as indicated by the fact that most of the job growth in the US over the last few years has be

        • by Teun ( 17872 )
          Strange, because in the end it's still the politicians that can be voted out of office.
          But American voters don't, they seem perfectly happy to be fooled by some of the most blatant lairs around, take Trump as example :)
      • Yes, this is very much a USA thing with their weak consumer protection laws.

        Nope sorry but Hertz is incompetent the world over. In fact it's not a USA thing because most of the time you're not talking to someone in the USA when you contact customer support. You'll get the same Indian call centre regardless of where you're from.

        I've had bad experiences with them in France, Netherlands, Germany and Australia too. Actually I had good experiences in the USA, and that despite writing off their car (not my fault).

        • by ukoda ( 537183 )
          Will Hertz fly someone from India to represent them in New Zealand's small claims court? Without the presence of lawyers the small claims court system we have here is designed to give a very low cost way of legally address such straight forward small value claims.
      • by Kokuyo ( 549451 )

        I think that the number of cases that are egregious may be lower and the rate of egregiousness, if that makes sense, is lower in Europe... but that shit happens here, too.

        In the 90s there was a show on German tv that was all about companies being incompetent (one hopes) or outright criminal in their dealings with consumers. Deutsche Telekom and Deutsche Post had their own recurring segments...

        I meant most western countries by my definition. Not one of us is taking "will of the people" seriously in any real

  • Not surprising (Score:5, Insightful)

    by silentbozo ( 542534 ) on Monday May 20, 2024 @03:44AM (#64484469) Journal

    Remember, this is the same company that had paying customers arrested because they couldn't keep their books straight, and decided that any cars they couldn't keep track of must be stolen.

    https://www.cnn.com/2022/07/15... [cnn.com]

    "Washington, DC CNN â"

    47 Hertz customers have filed a lawsuit against the rental company that describes horror stories after they were allegedly falsely reported as having stolen its rental cars, and in some cases even jailed.

    The plaintiffs allege being blind-sided by arrests â" sometimes at gunpoint â" and in some cases spending time in jail. Some plaintiffs describe losing their jobs in the fallout from the arrests.

    The lawsuit alleges systematic flaws in Hertzâ(TM)s reporting of thefts, including not recording rental extensions, falsely claiming customers havenâ(TM)t paid, failing to track its own vehicle inventory and failing to correct false reports to police. The lawsuit was filed in Delaware Superior Court and comes on the heels of a court ruling that these cases could be pursued outside bankruptcy court. (Hertz had filed for bankruptcy in May 2020 before emerging in July 2021.) "

    I think the real surprise is that Hertz is still in business, and people are still renting cars from them.

  • by iAmWaySmarterThanYou ( 10095012 ) on Monday May 20, 2024 @04:52AM (#64484529)

    Poor bastard pulls in next to me, gets out, then taps on my window.

    They didn't show him how to charge it. It isn't hard once you know but it isn't obvious the first time, either.

    They also apparently are locked to charge to 80%? Or they didn't show him how to change max charge. Unclear. I wasn't going to get out to check for him.

    They could have spent 30 seconds explaining some basics to him but instead he drove off saying how shit Tesla are. Tesla should have required some training basics before letting their cars out like that. Very bad experience for no reason.

    • by mobby_6kl ( 668092 ) on Monday May 20, 2024 @05:24AM (#64484559)

      I rented a Polestar 2 from Hertz in Scotland because it was literally the cheapest car I could get. It was actually fine*.

      They didn't show him how to charge it. It isn't hard once you know but it isn't obvious the first time, either.

      At pickup the agent asked me if I've used EVs before and skipped everything when I said yes (rented a plug-in Volvo before).

      They also apparently are locked to charge to 80%? Or they didn't show him how to change max charge. Unclear. I wasn't going to get out to check for him.

      Don't recall if this was the case, mine was charged to 82% so might've been capped at 90%. It's in the settings that the previous person could've changed. Anyway it's a reasonable default to minimize battery degradation.

      They could have spent 30 seconds explaining some basics to him but instead he drove off saying how shit Tesla are. Tesla should have required some training basics before letting their cars out like that. Very bad experience for no reason.

      Well Tesla are shit. But yeah they should've explained it, or maybe they did offer it and the customer rejected it. Could very well depend on the local branch though.

      * Until the return. The car was checked over by a third party at return that does it for all rental companies and the guy said that my car was fine, but I got a notification for damage assessment by email later. Turns out he documented some pre-existing damage but linked it to my rental. It took a while but actual Hertz staff helped clear that up.

      As for "gas" chargers, the agreement was to return at the same level. I assume if I brought it back empty, they would've charged me at silly kWh rates just like they do for gas.

      • I have a Hertz Polestar 2 right now. They tossed me the keys and left me to my own devices. Took me several minutes to realise the reason there was no start button in the car was that the car was always automatically on and I could just drive off.

        A simple card with the car to cover the basics would go a long way.

        Also yeah mine was delivered to my house with the charge cap set to 90%, but it's not locked. It just defaults to this value. Bigger issue with the Polestar is people who don't log out. When I fired

    • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Monday May 20, 2024 @09:11AM (#64484959)

      They didn't show him how to charge it. It isn't hard once you know but it isn't obvious the first time, either.

      That is an issue. One of my colleagues just got given a Tesla, a general assumption that you can figure out the car yourself. Teslas are the worst for this. This was the guy's transgressions:
      - Couldn't figure out how to charge the car. I showed him.
      - Couldn't figure out how to stop charging the car - he ended up calling Hertz. It's not difficult but you do need to know that you have to swipe your pass again to stop the charge.
      - Couldn't figure out how to lock the car. Seriously Tesla's stupid RFID card has no exterior marking on the car showing how to use it. He ended up using Youtube to check a video of how to lock his car.
      - Kept flashing me as we were going down the highway. Turns out he was trying to figure out how to get the automatic wipers to turn off since they were running during dry weather.

      To be fair, this is a general new car issue. I rented a DS7 and when we were at the Hotel I had to sit down and go through the manual to figure out how the heck to turn the passenger airbag on (I actually complained to Hertz that they rented me a car that was unsafe by default and that users shouldn't need to figure out how to turn safety features back on their cars after the previous renter does something).

      They also apparently are locked to charge to 80%?

      Virtually all EVs default to this. But they aren't locked as far as I can see. At least none of the Hertz rentals I've had (including the current one) are locked.

      • On the 80% thing on rentals: I really don't know but I've seen other non-EV people complain about this before. I'm guessing the car is manually set to 80% to keep the same people from sitting at the cable for 2+ hours to get the extra 20% but I never rented one and these were all EV noobs so not sure what's going on there.

        Tesla really needs to provide a how-to cheat sheet card to new owners and these rentals. They're giving a lot of people a really bad first impression for no reason. When I got mine I di

  • OMG they rented a car and they got charged a surcharge for gasoline they didn't use. BFD.

    At least they weren're reported as car thieves, had cops draw guns on them, got arrested on the site of their road in front of their children, and had to bail out of jail hours later (either missing their flight or a vacation). Fortunately that wouldn't happen in the first world. In America. Certainly not with Hertz.
    https://www.npr.org/2022/12/06... [npr.org]

  • Isn't this standard operating procedure for US corps, i.e. over-charge, add on extra & surprise charges, charge for things you didn't ask for & didn't use, etc.? Then they make it so difficult to get through to customer service & resolve the issues that hopefully many will give up & the corp can keep the money? The land of opportunity is filled with opportunists, it would seem.
  • by shilly ( 142940 ) on Monday May 20, 2024 @06:06AM (#64484623)

    The scale of how badly Hertz managed to fuck up this transition to EVs is approaching Boeing levels. As this article demonstrates, it's not about something inherent to EVs, it's about Hertz's inability to execute competently. They managed both to make this a massively complicated process for themselves and customers despite the basics not being that complicated, and fail at simple aspects of the basics like ensuring their IT systems had the right flags added.

    • This has zero to do with the EV transition. Hertz has infamously incompetent customer service. They've been doing this shit for 10+ years already. The only thing "news" here is which line items they fucked up this time.

      I was once charged for snow chains in a country where it snows so little you don't even need winter tires, from a Hertz dealership who don't have them even if you did for some strange reason want some.

      That said luckily it was a local hire, so rather than dealing with their ludicrously bad cal

      • by shilly ( 142940 )

        I agree with you -- I wasn't sufficiently clear. By "this transition to EVs", I simply meant "Hertz's move from an all ICE fleet to a part-EV fleet". They fuck everything up and why should this be any different. Clearly, their fuck ups extend way beyond just customer service and experience, though. The back office looks like it's just as much of a mess

  • I was a loyal Hertz customer for many years but their systems have always been awful and they seem to getting worse. I got overcharged by them a year ago for returning a car late when my flight had already left by the time they alleged I returned it. I pointed this out but they just couldn't understand how this could be... Whoever comes in next (or is there now) as CEO needs to grab the systems by the scruff and make then 21st century ready. I mean, it ain't rocket science people.
  • My take-away (Score:4, Informative)

    by Baron_Yam ( 643147 ) on Monday May 20, 2024 @06:22AM (#64484645)

    Hertz is worse than U-Haul. That's pretty damn impressive.

    The second time I rented, I went to Enterprise and told the clerk about my first experience with U-Haul. I was told, "We get a lot of clients from them".

  • by chas.williams ( 6256556 ) on Monday May 20, 2024 @08:38AM (#64484871)
    If you check any Tesla, the gas gauge reads 0. The vehicle was refueled with 0 gallons of gas, said the newly minted computer science major.
  • They were charged for bring back the EV less than 50% full. The line says gas because it was not updated.
    And as one that has rented tesla from Hertz 2x and Avis 1x, they BOTH warn you to bring it back with 2/3 or more full OR you will be charged ( most ppl that have been charged were below 50% ).
    • ...but, $277? Does it really cost that much to charge up an EV? That's half again what it costs to fill my tow vehicle with extended tank, even at today's prices.

      • The cost for fully charging a Model Y at a public DCFC would be about a tenth of that.

        Even if you sought out the most expensive place in the continental US - which appears to be a mind-blowing $1.33/Kwh - fully charging a 81KWH pack would still be under half that even with session fees and other bullshit.
        =Smidge=

  • by Huitzil ( 7782388 ) on Monday May 20, 2024 @10:04AM (#64485063)
    My impression over the years has been that local teams use gas surcharges to boost their margins and make their individual branch look good from a KPI standpoint. Ultimately it's a game of probability. A long time ago I rented a car in WV, made sure to return it full. I thought it was a little strange that when returning it, the manager in charge asked to see my fuel receipt even though he literally saw that the fuel tank was full, as to confirm whether I'd be able to make a claim against them if they charged me. I was really young at the time and got scammed all the time as a young grad, easy prey. Ended up getting hit with an $80 charge (was a lot at the time) - which I ended up getting reversed form Amex. I'm sure this was a common practice, and if only 1/10th of folks notice, they're in the green.
    • They want to see a receipt because they want to see if it was filled up nearby and relatively recently. You can drive and burn a gallon or two off of a topped-off tank and the needle will still be on full.

      Of course, not having the receipt readily handy is also extra profit for them too.

  • I'm banned (Score:5, Funny)

    by groobly ( 6155920 ) on Monday May 20, 2024 @11:02AM (#64485267)

    I've been banned from Hertz since 1989. Hooray!

    (Why, you ask? Because no one paid my corporate credit card bill which Hertz billed after I left the company, and Hertz never notified me. I only found out when i tried to rent in 1991.)

  • Think about it. They made a terrible investment when they bought 30,000 Teslas and nothing is ever more important than the bottom line. Most customers probably never notice the charge (esp corporate users) and they blow off the fee that do. All the while the bottom line recovers a bit more. Itâ(TM)s great for everyoneâ¦well, everyone named Hertz.
  • I rented a Polestar from Hertz last year and was offered the option to prepay and return empty. Of course that is based on charge in the battery and not fuel in the tank. If I returned it with less than I'm started I'm could have been billed for charging the vehicle back up.
    It's a convenience many people like. Not having to worry about stopping to fill a gas tank, or in the case of an EV waiting to charge. You don't want to risk missing your plane while waiting to charge an EV.

    I declined because I knew wha

  • Film at eleven.

  • There's a simple explanation how these huge fees are being racked up.
    Superchargers will charge a $1/minute idle fee when a car has completed charging. Combine this with limited or slow charging spots at a Hertz facility, workers are probably taking low-charge vehicles to a nearby Supercharger to get them topped off quickly. This still takes some time, so instead of hanging around for a half hour or more, they go back to Hertz.
    Then they don't pick up the car until hours later, or the next day.
    So that $15-20

  • Short term corporate fraud that will end up in court, settled with company admitting no wrong doing but paying out millions.

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