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-   -   Don't rent from Avis Car Rental (https://www.fodors.com/community/travel-tips-and-trip-ideas/dont-rent-from-avis-car-rental-1026171/)

AvisTeals Sep 23rd, 2014 05:25 AM

Don't rent from Avis Car Rental
 
Don't rent from Avis Car Rental. I recently did and they added $171 to my bill without my knowledge. The clerk at the desk added insurance and other extras to the contract even though I clearly said no to all the extras they were pushing on me. The clerk said ok, told me what boxes to check and sign on the screen which unbeknownst to me included the very extras I declined. THEY MISREPRESENTED THE CONTRACT TO ME. When I found the charges on my credit card bill, Avis refused to correct the mistake because it appears on an obscure line of the contract. I have since heard of many other similar complaints on Avis.

Don't rent from Avis. If you do not take my advice, then make sure you carefully examine every line of their confusing contracts to ensure they have not snuck in additional charges that you didn't want. This happened at the Avis in Orlando airport, but after dealing with their customer service department for three weeks, I would caution against choosing Avis anywhere.

Sojourntraveller Sep 23rd, 2014 07:42 AM

Yawn, yet another 'not responsible for my own actions, someone else is', post.

fmpden Sep 23rd, 2014 07:51 AM

Typical new poster rant in multi locations. First pull up your big girl pants, read the contact, then sign it.

AvisTeals Sep 23rd, 2014 04:19 PM

It was presented on a computer screen where he directed me where to click after I said no to this or no to that. Then printed then signed the screen where he said. The contract that it resulted in was columns of text and numbers. Including four obvious declines. the added stuff seriously not so obvious. No bottom line. Did I scrutinize it… no should I have… yes. Still it was misrepresented to me and I would never have expected that so yeah now I know and thought it worthwhile to share so that others could be aware. I do take responsibility that I should have read it again before I walked away. That much of it was my mistake and could have easily happened to lots of other people. Just don't trust that the rep behind the desk has your best interest in mind.

janisj Sep 23rd, 2014 08:14 PM

Your title should be something like >> Don't be a putz and be sure to read a contract before signing it<< . . . <i>not</i> >>Don't rent from Avis Car Rental<<

susanabc Sep 29th, 2014 07:50 AM

Wow.!!! Didn't realize this was a teenage- high school mean girls club forum!!! For real people? Why don't you worry about your self proclaimed superior selves and don't go on forums unless you have something helpful to add !!!!

RoamsAround Sep 29th, 2014 10:37 AM

OP put this same rant on the US forum - it got 42 responses!

MissGreen Oct 3rd, 2014 02:33 AM

Too late. I use Avis all the time without any issues.

MissGreen Oct 3rd, 2014 02:36 AM

And if you had had an accident you would of been kissing the car rep for 'making' you take out the extras. I say better to be safe than sorry in a hire car.

crellston Oct 11th, 2014 03:47 AM

I have usd Avis dozens of times without any problem. That said, it always pays to assume that all car hire companies are con artists who will attempt to rip unsuspecting customers off at every opportunity. check everything and trust no one!

annhig Oct 11th, 2014 12:11 PM

We too used Avis on a recent trip to Germany.

We prebooked including whatever insurance we wanted, and when we picked up the car we weren't asked to accept anything extra. Also, we had a real contract to sign, not a screen.

Actually the OP has a good point about signing a screen - don't. insist that they print it off so you can read it.

sparkchaser Oct 19th, 2014 11:13 PM

<i>Too late. I use Avis all the time without any issues.</i>

Same here. Avis is my go to for U.S. rentals.

NewbE Oct 20th, 2014 01:46 PM

<Actually the OP has a good point about signing a screen - don't. insist that they print it off so you can read it.>
After you sign the screen, which displays a copy of the contract, they give it to you in paper. If you can read the screen, what is the advantage of requesting the paper before you sign?

Btw, the OP backed off many of her comments on another thread and accepted reponsibility for not having read carefully enough.

NewbE Oct 20th, 2014 01:46 PM

http://www.fodors.com/community/unit...car-rental.cfm

annhig Oct 21st, 2014 01:14 AM

the point, NewbE is that it is IME extremely difficult to read things properly off a screen, and there is an unspoken imperative to read it quickly.

If they can print it off anyway, why not do so before you sign and let you read it carefully at your leisure?

NewbE Oct 21st, 2014 07:32 AM

annhig, I understand your point now.

annhig Oct 21st, 2014 08:32 AM

that's good, NewbE. as a lawyer I am perhaps more careful than some about what I sign and more alive to the tricks that some companies use to stop us doing so.

wanting you to sign a screen seems to me to fall into that category.

Sojourntraveller Oct 21st, 2014 08:37 AM

Let's be honest, most people are in a hurry when they arrive somewhere and then head straight to a car rental. They don't read the contract whether on a screen or on paper.

What they shouldn't then do however is complain about their OWN behaviour problem. The only 'I joined this travel forum to rant' type post I have seen more often is about travel insurance. Yet again, a case of not reading the contract.

It is human nature to always want something to be someone else's fault. Most people are very good at blaming others rather than themselves.

NewbE Oct 21st, 2014 09:31 AM

anhig, this may be a quibble, but I do not regard the screen as a "trick" to prevent you from reading something. In 2014, the ability to read a screen is a life skill.

Of course, as a customer you have every right to request paper. I do think, though, that the problem is not the medium but the tendency of most of us travelers to hurry through the tedious process.

annhig Oct 21st, 2014 10:08 AM

In 2014, the ability to read a screen is a life skill.>>

I don't disagree with this, but it's rather different reading, say, the terms and conditions of an airline company in your own home to trying to take in the small print on someone else's office computer.

Perhaps my job makes me more suspicious than most of some companies' motives.


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