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Mexico Headline News
Pricey insurance on Mexico car rental Q: I have a
question about car rental insurance. I recently booked a car in Manzanillo,
Mexico, through Hotwire. I ended up paying $197 in advance for a two-week rental
through Thrifty. My practice in renting cars has been to decline the optional
insurance, relying on my personal coverage and my credit card coverage. That
hasn't been a problem — until now. When I arrived at the busy rental counter, I was presented
with a contract that required an additional $22 per day for insurance, which
added more than $300 to the cost of the car. I was told that declining the
coverage was not an option. After several minutes of heated multilingual dispute, and in
the absence of any Thrifty supervisor, I concluded that my alternatives were to
initial the form or do without the car. I initialed the contract and wrote the
word "protest" alongside the initials, but the clerk then proceeded to scratch
over that word. Since the reservation had been made through Hotwire, I
contacted the company by e-mail when I returned home and asked if they could
look into the reason why the "estimated total cost" they provided had not been
honored. Hotwire said the accuracy of the information they provide is
not their concern, that they would not ask Thrifty about it, and that I should
contact Thrifty myself. I did. Thrifty did not respond to a written query. I'd like a refund of the extra $308 I had to pay. Can you
help? Tom Gainor, Mendota Heights, Minn. A: Thrifty's insurance requirements should have been
disclosed to you when you paid for your rental, which was when you booked it
through Hotwire. The way I read that, it means insurance should have been
presented to you as an option — not a requirement. The problem with a Hotwire rental is that you aren't able to
choose which company to rent with. When you book one of its cars, you're just
shown a rate and a class of car. You only find out the agency you're renting
through after your credit card has been charged. That means you can't know if the car rental company will
charge you extra for insurance and then make a booking decision based on that.
You've already paid for your car, so you're stuck. Incidentally, this also happens with sites like Hotwire that
sell hotels in this way. You prepay for your hotel, only to discover that it
charges a mandatory $15-a-day "resort" fee that there's no getting out of. The
best remedy is to dispute those fees on your credit card, since you never agreed
to pay them. Works every time. Hotwire, as your travel agent, should have contacted Thrifty
and negotiated an immediate return of your $308. Instead, it sent you a form
letter. Thrifty could have at least acknowledged your e-mail beyond the auto
responder even spammers get. I contacted Hotwire on your behalf, and this time the
company got in touch with Thrifty. A representative contacted you and verified
that credit card insurance — the kind you were using to cover your car — is not
accepted in Mexico. "We do try to ensure customers are made aware of this," she
added. In terms of the "excessive tactics" concerning the sale of
the insurance — Thrifty's words, not mine — the company representative said they
do not condone them. Thrifty cut you a check for $308 . |
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