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Europcar faces €200 million fine for ripping-off customers

europcarThe surprising thing about today's  ‘scoop’ by the Daily Telegraph is that it has taken so long to reveal what hundreds of thousands of customers have known for years, that car rental companies are ripping-off customers over supposed ‘repairs’ that either overcharged or charged for several times for the same scratch of dent.

Europcar in the UK now stands accused of fraudulently overcharging customers with Trading Standards officers raiding the French company’s UK head office last week.

The Daily Telegraph breathlessly reports that Europcar in the UK “may have profited to the tune of millions of pounds by inflating the cost to consumers of windscreens and other repairs by up to 300 per cent.”

The company can be fine up to 10% of its turnover. The company had revenues in 2016 of €2.15 billion, so this suddenly has become a serious matter but at the same time is one that has been avoided for years by trading authorities in other European markets, including Portugal’s ASAE despite thousands of complaints.

Consumer groups accused Europcar of "exploiting" customers, according to the Telegraph’s ‘exclusive.’  These unnamed ‘groups’ suspected the practice was widespread in the car hire industry where those accidental damage and scrapes falling outside Europcar’s insurance cover, are billed for inflated repairs presented as the true cost.

There now is evidence showing grossly inflated repair prices charged to renters with the car company pocketing the difference between what it charges the customer and what is actually pays the repair shop.

Europcar can produce a repair bill, if pushed, but once the customer’s bill is paid the supplier issues Europcar with another invoice for the lower amount and the car rental company pockets the difference.

In one example quoted in the Telegraph, a Europcar customer, Zdenek Kramsky, was told by the company that the cost for a windscreen replacement was £615 plus VAT.

But when he called the supplier, National Windscreens, for a quote for the same job he was told the cost would be £176 plus VAT.

Kramsky was told by a National Windscreens employee that Europcar agrees an inflated price with National Windscreens, and later receives a rebate for the difference.
Mr Kramsky told the Daily Telegraph, "Whichever way you look at it, what Europcar did to me was unethical, underhand, immoral, unreasonable and bad commercial practise.”

James Daley, a director of the campaign group Fairer Finance, said, "People have long suspected they are being ripped off for hire car repairs but it’s shocking to see the evidence. Car hire companies are in the business of loaning vehicles, not exploiting customers involved in a scrape.

"Europcar are unlikely to be the only ones doing this and the industry must change its ways."

The Telegraph did not include the ‘multiple billing for the same scratch’ scam, a ruse well used by many car rental companies which will charge for a repair and re-spray to, for example, a door, but then waits until subsequent customers scratch the same door, charging each for the whole job.

Europcar is in a highly embarrassing position having just bought Spanish car rental rip-off specialists Goldcar which operates across Europe including stands at Portugal’s main airports. Aiming to raise Goldcar’s image from the primordial swam where it languishes, Europcar now has image problems of its own - potentially expensive ones.
Long considered the worst possible type of car rental company in the industry, Goldcar is being sold for €500 million to Europcar but needs European competition clearance before the deal finally is signed.

Back in the UK, "Europcar takes the allegations very seriously and is conducting a thorough internal investigation. The company is co-operating fully with Trading Standards in its investigations.  It can make no further comment at this point," nor has National Windscreens.

 

See also: 'Europcar buys Goldcar for €500 million'  June 19th, 2017

 

 

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Comments  

+1 #10 Doug Stone 2017-06-27 16:45
I took a Gold Car from Lisboa, had bald tyres all round, will never use them again
0 #9 Margaridaana 2017-06-26 14:13
Always take all round photos of any car you are hiring.
It may take a little time, not to mention inconvenience to the car rental rep. but it could save you a lot of money. And don't forget the door lock scam, always a winner for the rental company. What a bunch of thieves!
+1 #8 Robert S 2017-06-25 21:48
This year I rented a car through Expedia which got me an Advantage car rental really cheap at Glasgow Airport this year. But it turned out I had to get it through Europcar which I was avoiding. I had to tell the office man many times I didn't want anything extra, then I had to initial some items. It had taken so long that I stupidly did initial it all and it turned out it cost me an extra $400. Stay away from Europcar or completely study anything you have to sign.
+1 #7 Robert S 2017-06-25 21:42
I rented a car in north Paris, I showed the guy who took me to the car that there was an extra scrape on that car, he said he would inform Europcar. I wasn't charged for it until a couple of months later then my credit card company said they had already paid them so I couldn't get the payment stopped.
+1 #6 Charly 2017-06-25 14:58
Dear EMMA R , in the contracts in general and in the "small letters" in particular you'll find not a single word about "sucking petrol" and "the secret arrangements about toll motorway payments".
However what you might find are some "general infos" about" Insurance" and "extra Insurance" of the cars. As you know everybody is pushed by the reps to subscribe that "extra Insurance formula". Unfortunately that's another SCAM as in the majority of the cases (when the driver did not have any accident during its rental period) that extra money disappears in full in the pockets of the rental company. As a conclusion: in one way or another a rental car renter will always be "the victim" of dishonest rental car companies or their staff.
When we disclosed the "petrol sucking problems" at Faro airport NO offcial body was interested in enquiring the case. Later on we learned that many people working in the airport were able "to buy cheap sucked petrol at a real bargain price"...
Their device: we all help each others !
+3 #5 liveaboard 2017-06-25 08:23
I recently rented a cargo van from Europcar in Lagos.
It was fine; the van had small damage everywhere when I collected it and the staff noted it all correctly.

However, the cost of renting a commercial vehicle is FAR higher than renting a passenger vehicle of similar value.
There are only a few companies who have a couple of commercial vehicles available to rent, and demand is high.
+6 #4 PeterG 2017-06-25 01:08
Quoting Emma R:
You need to look at the small print charly !!

The problems are not those covered in the small print. It's the deliberate lying and bullying that marks this company as the worst car rental company at Faro airport and maybe the other airports too
-5 #3 Emma R 2017-06-25 00:18
You need to look at the small print charly !!
0 #2 Charly 2017-06-24 18:45
For the sceptici among us:
at that time these facts have been largely commented and documented in the national press..
-2 #1 Charly 2017-06-24 18:43
The only "2 big incidents" known at Faro airport are that car renting companie's staff suck the petrol from the cars once entered. As the clients are supposed to enter a car with a full tank... and when it isn't.... than rather "extra" big amounts of money are extracted from the renter's credit card..
And the second scam: the exaggerated "costs and previsions " for the tollways. As such the car rental companies - besides the toll companies themselves - make a super nice extra profit out of the tourism sector.

And of course what happens in Faro will probably also happen in Lisboa and all the other airports in the country. Nice business !!!

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