Re: Tips on renting cars
Not sure I can save you a lot, but I can relate what I've learned. Renting has gotten more expensive. Each market is different. I have mostly rented cars in Denver and San Jose in the last year. As a frequent user with a corporate rate, I pay about $57/day for a compact or intermediate car in Denver and probably about $80/day in San Jose. (National or Avis). That's before taxes, fuel, taxes, fees, and taxes. Which can raise it 30% or more. SUV's are popular and more expensive across the board. Day of the week and week of the year matter a lot. E.g. in Denver during spring break in March, you'll pay twice the regular rates because everyone is going to the mountains. There are no cars sitting around.
The SUV is driving your price up for sure. If you can survive with a minivan or a larger car, you can probably get a better deal. Also, booking the car with your airfare can sometimes save $. And, if you are risk-taker, there are such things as last-minute deals on places like hotwire. If you can reserve a car on a refundable reservation and then find something cheaper at the last minute, you can cancel the original reservation.
Of course, one-way rentals are usually astronomically priced. Avoid unless someone else is footing the bill.
Economic note. Recently read about how auto builders keep their dying model assembly lines running by building fleet cars and selling them dirt cheap to rental and corporate clients. SUV's sell well for the car companies, so they can charge the fleet buyers close to retail for them. That's why you find certain models everywhere in the rental car companies.
Just for fun, I just tried my codes on Avis for Newark airport the last week of July and they wanted $540 for a Ford Escape. Same dates, same car in Denver was $360. So, you aren't far off.
Nick
“If today is not your day,
then be happy
for this day shall never return.
And if today is your day,
then be happy now
for this day shall never return.”
― Kamand Kojouri
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