What kind of scanners do you mean?
Makes it extra important to thoroughly photograph and video your car on pickup.AI scanners. They photograph the car as it is returned and use the before and after pictures to detect damage. It sounds like a good thing, but people are reporting being charged large sums for even the smallest door dings.
I've wondered if, for those that have had massive bills, if one could request the pictures from the last time the rental was turned in. Let's see the "before" and "after" versions.
I've heard though that simple "wear and tear" items could end up being the renter's responsibility. Like a door ding if parked next to someone who opens their door too quick. To say nothing about claims that water on the vehicle has produced "false positives" of damage.
I stopped renting from Hertz when they started using them since I didn't want to have to keep track if what airports they had them at.
I hope you could just show them a receipt that you filled the tank.Every single rental agency has them at the new consolidated LAX rental facility (although only a couple rental companies have moved in, the rest will join them soon). They’ll be everywhere before the end of the decade.
We did a one-way Avis rental from a neighborhood location near our home to LAX (too far to ask for a ride, and cheaper than parking there). Filled the ta k up at a gas station across the street from the facility. Upon entry, cameras check you in and look for damage while connected service sends fuel and mileage info. So within seconds of entering, we get a bill. They penalized us something like $60 for not retuning on a full tank… again, we topped it off at the gas station nearby. It was a Kia Soul and we put 55 miles on it, nearly all on the highway, and 2.8 gallons of gas in it. Absolutely no way we used 2.8 gallons.
That’s why people hate the AI system. At least with Avis, it takes less effort to get ahold of a human and they did remove it.
I hope you could just show them a receipt that you filled the tank.
. Granted, it’s been many years since I’ve done something like that.Luckily I don’t fly LAX. So problem solved.Every single rental agency has them at the new consolidated LAX rental facility (although only a couple rental companies have moved in, the rest will join them soon). They’ll be everywhere before the end of the decade.
We did a one-way Avis rental from a neighborhood location near our home to LAX (too far to ask for a ride, and cheaper than parking there). Filled the ta k up at a gas station across the street from the facility. Upon entry, cameras check you in and look for damage while connected service sends fuel and mileage info. So within seconds of entering, we get a bill. They penalized us something like $60 for not retuning on a full tank… again, we topped it off at the gas station nearby. It was a Kia Soul and we put 55 miles on it, nearly all on the highway, and 2.8 gallons of gas in it. Absolutely no way we used 2.8 gallons.
That’s why people hate the AI system. At least with Avis, it takes less effort to get ahold of a human and they did remove it.
Wouldn't the scanners do a better job documenting the condition of the car when you rent it?Makes it extra important to thoroughly photograph and video your car on pickup.
How will that prove you filled the tank?I hope you could just show them a receipt that you filled the tank.
One would hope! I didn’t know they scanned on the way out but makes sense. Guess there is no avoiding being screwed by Hertz…Wouldn't the scanners do a better job documenting the condition of the car when you rent it?
I guess you can't exactly but if you just put $25 in at a station just outside the airport, the odds are good that it's full. If you didn't drive very much and only need to add a little, you're screwed, other than taking video to show the pump click off.How will that prove you filled the tank?