How Do You Choose A Repair Shop? Autopian Asks

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Many car enthusiasts are fairly handy, with the mindset and toolset to DIY most repairs. However, every so often, you end up with a job that you can’t or don’t want to tackle at home. Maybe you don’t own tire mounting and balancing equipment, maybe you don’t have time to rebuild an automatic transmission, or maybe access to a particular part is such a pain in the butt that you’d rather pay a pro. There’s no shame in any of that, but there is difficulty in what comes next — choosing a repair shop.

This can be an absolute minefield. Some shops are better than others, and at the end of the day, we all just want to know our cars are being cared for by trustworthy professionals who won’t pull any shenanigans on the work or the bill.

One way I’ve done it is through recommendations from friends. If they’ve had good experiences and you trust them, chances are I’d be more comfortable sticking with their recommendation. It’s also worth noting that model-specific forums can be an excellent resource. Sure, some might look at forum frequenters in 2024 like they’re cave-dwelling soldiers unaware that the war was over years ago, but these message board messiahs are actually smart. They believe in permanence, searchability, sharing knowledge, and maintaining a reasonable standard. They’re obsessively into cars, so if they recommend a shop, chances are it’ll be alright.

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Of course, other factors need to be weighed as well. Proximity to work or home, Google reviews, hourly labor rates, all that stuff. So, how do you choose a repair shop? Let us know in the comments below, because I’m ready to read your responses.

(Photo credits: Thomas Hundal)

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59 thoughts on “How Do You Choose A Repair Shop? Autopian Asks

  1. Let some random stranger touch MY babies?? I don’t think so! But really, I have enough cars now to allow myself the time to attempt pretty much all repairs. Only car I’ll take to the shop is my Volt, because A: Its under warranty, and B: I donno my lectrics real good.

    In the past, I worked for a parts store. Lemme tell ya, there is no better way to know what shops to avoid, and which ones are trustworthy than delivering parts.

  2. Let some random stranger touch MY babies?? I don’t think so! But really, I have enough cars now to allow myself the time to attempt pretty much all repairs. Only car I’ll take to the shop is my Volt, because A: Its under warranty, and B: I donno my lectrics real good.

    In the past, I worked for a parts store. Lemme tell ya, there is no better way to know what shops to avoid, and which ones are trustworthy than delivering parts.

  3. I observed this garage near me taking care of Morgans and other incredible antiques, so i figured they’d know what to do with my 69 vw camper. Not only do they know how to care for it, the owner used to have one!

  4. I observed this garage near me taking care of Morgans and other incredible antiques, so i figured they’d know what to do with my 69 vw camper. Not only do they know how to care for it, the owner used to have one!

  5. My parents have been going to the same shop for 25+ years now, they know the guy who runs the place. Not that that gets them any special deals or anything. If I can swing it I’ve taken my vehicles there, but I live a little ways away and it always involves a vehicle swap with my parents and my dad usually being the one who interacts with the place.

    For a little while in one place I lived, there was a shop right down the street I used a few times. I could drop my vehicle off and walk home in 5 minutes. If I had continued to live there I probably would have started favoring them over the one my parents like, simply because of proximity.

    But now where my wife and I live, I haven’t had a chance to find a shop close by, so we’ve gone back to my parent’s shop. Though to be honest I wasn’t that happy after the last time my truck was there. Went in for leaky fan clutch, so they put a new belt on as well, and the new one squeals when the old one didn’t.

    1. That’s cool that your parents found that kind of place – it’s so rare for something like that to last so long these days – and I hope your last time was just an aberration.

  6. My parents have been going to the same shop for 25+ years now, they know the guy who runs the place. Not that that gets them any special deals or anything. If I can swing it I’ve taken my vehicles there, but I live a little ways away and it always involves a vehicle swap with my parents and my dad usually being the one who interacts with the place.

    For a little while in one place I lived, there was a shop right down the street I used a few times. I could drop my vehicle off and walk home in 5 minutes. If I had continued to live there I probably would have started favoring them over the one my parents like, simply because of proximity.

    But now where my wife and I live, I haven’t had a chance to find a shop close by, so we’ve gone back to my parent’s shop. Though to be honest I wasn’t that happy after the last time my truck was there. Went in for leaky fan clutch, so they put a new belt on as well, and the new one squeals when the old one didn’t.

    1. That’s cool that your parents found that kind of place – it’s so rare for something like that to last so long these days – and I hope your last time was just an aberration.

  7. I usually look for a shop that specializes in the make of the car in question, or more broadly, the country of manufacture. Euro shops might cost more, but for me it’s worth it to know they specialize in the car I’m bringing them. Usually though, I do all my own work on our cars.

    When there’s a job I can’t/don’t want to do muself, there’s only one shop around here I let touch my car. They built my dad and I’s S2000 and C8 track cars, along with countless others, and we know the owner. What I love about them is that they don’t just do track cars. It’s not unusual to see a Porsche, a Corvette, and an Explorer with 200k miles on it all in the shop at the same time. They had a Wagoneer in there last week. When my best friend bought her 2012 Beetle, several issues cropped up shortly after she bought it. My dad paid to have this shop work on it for her, and she said she had never been treated so well by an auto shop. They walked her though exactly what they did to the car, why they did it, and answered all of her questions. She said every other shop she’d been to talked down to her because she was a woman, but this shop didn’t. She’s gone on to recommend them to other people, for that alone.

    Additionally, they have a high-end alignment rack, since they build track cars and all. I’ve had alignments done at other shops, and while they were fine, there is something to be said for that alignment rack. I’ve never had a car track straighter than it does when that shop does the alignment. They’ll be replacing the shocks and springs on my Sportwagen soon, the owner even helped me pick the best combo for a lower ride height while balancing that with comfort. The Sportwagen needs a timing belt this year, and after reading the DIY, I think they’ll be doing that job as well. Their rates are high, for sure, but not much more than the dealership and I trust them a helluva lot more.

    1. Even that’s not a sure thing. Had a mechanic back in college who only worked on Hondas. Repair and speed shop. Did a bunch of Mugen installs, etc. Had an 88 CRX DX that kept stalling. Brought it in, it’s the distributor, gimme $500 and it’ll work fine. Nope. Brought it in again, it’s the fuel pump gimme $200 and it’ll work fine. Nope. Again, bad fuel filter, pay me more, it’ll be great. Nope. Three times was enough for me – $800 was a shit-ton of money to a broke college student in the 90s.

      Borrowed from my college fund to replace the car, then got the local car club over to disassemble it and part it out. They kept what they wanted, I sold the rest. One guy takes the throttle body home, then lets me know the car he installed it on kept stalling. Took him 10 minutes to diagnose a bad injector (those cars had basically what was almost a glorified carb setup, with two injectors dumping into the throat of the throttle body – if one died the car would stall). I was pissed – all that money wasted and still a dead car, and a 20 year old kid figured it out right away.

      That’s the incident that convinced me to learn how to work on cars. I farm most of the work out these days because I’m just too busy to be under a car all the time, but at least I learned enough to know when a mechanic is WAGing his way through a repair.

      Postscript: Same mechanic installed a supercharger on my friend’s CRX. Worked great, mostly, but had weird issues with running rich even though he had a Zdyne chip and what should have been a proper tune. He finally dove under the hood and found a vacuum line with a golf tee jammed in it. Dumbshit mechanic couldn’t figure out where it went so he just blocked it off. My friend installed it correctly, weird rich problem went away immediately.

    2. Re: “she said she had never been treated so well by an auto shop. They walked her though exactly what they did to the car, why they did it, and answered all of her questions. She said every other shop she’d been to talked down to her because she was a woman, but this shop didn’t. She’s gone on to recommend them to other people, for that alone.”

      For the love of all things holy, if there are any shop owners / techs or other staff reading this… This Is The Way!

      Treat everyone with respect, explain what you found as wrong and why you are recommending the following be fixed. It is not hard, it does require a baseline of integrity, intelligence, mechanical ability and people skills; of course these should be bare minimum for any company / people with which you do business.

  8. I usually look for a shop that specializes in the make of the car in question, or more broadly, the country of manufacture. Euro shops might cost more, but for me it’s worth it to know they specialize in the car I’m bringing them. Usually though, I do all my own work on our cars.

    When there’s a job I can’t/don’t want to do muself, there’s only one shop around here I let touch my car. They built my dad and I’s S2000 and C8 track cars, along with countless others, and we know the owner. What I love about them is that they don’t just do track cars. It’s not unusual to see a Porsche, a Corvette, and an Explorer with 200k miles on it all in the shop at the same time. They had a Wagoneer in there last week. When my best friend bought her 2012 Beetle, several issues cropped up shortly after she bought it. My dad paid to have this shop work on it for her, and she said she had never been treated so well by an auto shop. They walked her though exactly what they did to the car, why they did it, and answered all of her questions. She said every other shop she’d been to talked down to her because she was a woman, but this shop didn’t. She’s gone on to recommend them to other people, for that alone.

    Additionally, they have a high-end alignment rack, since they build track cars and all. I’ve had alignments done at other shops, and while they were fine, there is something to be said for that alignment rack. I’ve never had a car track straighter than it does when that shop does the alignment. They’ll be replacing the shocks and springs on my Sportwagen soon, the owner even helped me pick the best combo for a lower ride height while balancing that with comfort. The Sportwagen needs a timing belt this year, and after reading the DIY, I think they’ll be doing that job as well. Their rates are high, for sure, but not much more than the dealership and I trust them a helluva lot more.

    1. Even that’s not a sure thing. Had a mechanic back in college who only worked on Hondas. Repair and speed shop. Did a bunch of Mugen installs, etc. Had an 88 CRX DX that kept stalling. Brought it in, it’s the distributor, gimme $500 and it’ll work fine. Nope. Brought it in again, it’s the fuel pump gimme $200 and it’ll work fine. Nope. Again, bad fuel filter, pay me more, it’ll be great. Nope. Three times was enough for me – $800 was a shit-ton of money to a broke college student in the 90s.

      Borrowed from my college fund to replace the car, then got the local car club over to disassemble it and part it out. They kept what they wanted, I sold the rest. One guy takes the throttle body home, then lets me know the car he installed it on kept stalling. Took him 10 minutes to diagnose a bad injector (those cars had basically what was almost a glorified carb setup, with two injectors dumping into the throat of the throttle body – if one died the car would stall). I was pissed – all that money wasted and still a dead car, and a 20 year old kid figured it out right away.

      That’s the incident that convinced me to learn how to work on cars. I farm most of the work out these days because I’m just too busy to be under a car all the time, but at least I learned enough to know when a mechanic is WAGing his way through a repair.

      Postscript: Same mechanic installed a supercharger on my friend’s CRX. Worked great, mostly, but had weird issues with running rich even though he had a Zdyne chip and what should have been a proper tune. He finally dove under the hood and found a vacuum line with a golf tee jammed in it. Dumbshit mechanic couldn’t figure out where it went so he just blocked it off. My friend installed it correctly, weird rich problem went away immediately.

    2. Re: “she said she had never been treated so well by an auto shop. They walked her though exactly what they did to the car, why they did it, and answered all of her questions. She said every other shop she’d been to talked down to her because she was a woman, but this shop didn’t. She’s gone on to recommend them to other people, for that alone.”

      For the love of all things holy, if there are any shop owners / techs or other staff reading this… This Is The Way!

      Treat everyone with respect, explain what you found as wrong and why you are recommending the following be fixed. It is not hard, it does require a baseline of integrity, intelligence, mechanical ability and people skills; of course these should be bare minimum for any company / people with which you do business.

  9. Easy, I just choose my garage.

    Unless it’s warranty, tires or alignment. Warranty goes back to the dealer. Tires, I’ve always had good luck with Discount Tire. Alignment, there’s this one pretty odd local guy that has a stall and specializes in alignments. Weird dude, and loves to complain about how much he hates working while he’s working on your vehicle, but he does a good job.

  10. Easy, I just choose my garage.

    Unless it’s warranty, tires or alignment. Warranty goes back to the dealer. Tires, I’ve always had good luck with Discount Tire. Alignment, there’s this one pretty odd local guy that has a stall and specializes in alignments. Weird dude, and loves to complain about how much he hates working while he’s working on your vehicle, but he does a good job.

  11. Friend endorsements.A place owned by one person who also works there, i.e., not a corporate conglomerate run by someone whose Mission Statement for their minions is “Squeeze every last dollar, and I’ll give you 25 cents for each one.”For something more special that I don’t/can’t do and that my repair guy is not comfortable doing, (say, replacing a hybrid’s battery), I’ll check Yelp reviews.For body repairs, all the above apply.
    I stopped going to dealers after they put “customer service reps” between me and the repairmen. They usually know nothing and do not care to service me, the customer.

    1. Not sure what happened to my post, squeezing everything together.

      1. Friend endorsements.
      2. A place owned by one person who also works there, i.e., not a corporate conglomerate run by someone whose Mission Statement for their minions is “Squeeze every last dollar, and I’ll give you 25 cents for each one.”
      3. For something more special that I don’t/can’t do and that my repair guy is not comfortable doing, (say, replacing a hybrid’s battery), I’ll check Yelp reviews.
      4. For body repairs, all the above apply.

      I stopped going to dealers after they put “customer service reps” between me and the repairmen. They usually know nothing and do not care to service me, the customer.

  12. Friend endorsements.A place owned by one person who also works there, i.e., not a corporate conglomerate run by someone whose Mission Statement for their minions is “Squeeze every last dollar, and I’ll give you 25 cents for each one.”For something more special that I don’t/can’t do and that my repair guy is not comfortable doing, (say, replacing a hybrid’s battery), I’ll check Yelp reviews.For body repairs, all the above apply.
    I stopped going to dealers after they put “customer service reps” between me and the repairmen. They usually know nothing and do not care to service me, the customer.

    1. Not sure what happened to my post, squeezing everything together.

      1. Friend endorsements.
      2. A place owned by one person who also works there, i.e., not a corporate conglomerate run by someone whose Mission Statement for their minions is “Squeeze every last dollar, and I’ll give you 25 cents for each one.”
      3. For something more special that I don’t/can’t do and that my repair guy is not comfortable doing, (say, replacing a hybrid’s battery), I’ll check Yelp reviews.
      4. For body repairs, all the above apply.

      I stopped going to dealers after they put “customer service reps” between me and the repairmen. They usually know nothing and do not care to service me, the customer.

  13. Things to look for:

    1. Good: If they waive diag fee for something simple, or they wave it for something the car needs which is so intensive that the cost of repair is more than the car
    2. Bad: If they insist on flushing all fluids on lower mileage vehicles. Fluid flushes really came around when the BG salesfolks toured the country in the late 90s/early 2000s. Some fluid flushes are ok, others do absolutely nothing, some can actually ruin your car.
    3. Good: If they take the time to explain exactly what happened to your car, bonus points for pointing it out on the actual vehicle.
    1. Great call on the fluid flush. I really hated the upsell on that, but I’ve noticed how a lot of places have backed off it at this point.

      “Does the factory recommend this?” “Well, no, but we do…”

  14. Things to look for:

    1. Good: If they waive diag fee for something simple, or they wave it for something the car needs which is so intensive that the cost of repair is more than the car
    2. Bad: If they insist on flushing all fluids on lower mileage vehicles. Fluid flushes really came around when the BG salesfolks toured the country in the late 90s/early 2000s. Some fluid flushes are ok, others do absolutely nothing, some can actually ruin your car.
    3. Good: If they take the time to explain exactly what happened to your car, bonus points for pointing it out on the actual vehicle.
    1. Great call on the fluid flush. I really hated the upsell on that, but I’ve noticed how a lot of places have backed off it at this point.

      “Does the factory recommend this?” “Well, no, but we do…”

  15. For me it’s easy. I work there.

    Unless it has to go to the factory dealership. Then I flip a coin as the two nearest to me are essentially equidistant from me and equally inconvenient to get to.

  16. For me it’s easy. I work there.

    Unless it has to go to the factory dealership. Then I flip a coin as the two nearest to me are essentially equidistant from me and equally inconvenient to get to.

  17. This is an important topic for me as I decided some years ago that I really don’t like working on cars. I get wildly frustrated with stuff that many of you seem to just work through. Since I’ve driven used Bimmers for the last 25 years or so, my criteria for a shop have boiled down to these two:

    1) NOT a dealer
    2) An indy shop that specializes in German cars, if not BMWs.

    After trying a couple of different places that qualified, I’ve settled on a shop that’s close enough for me to walk to, that works on any BMW, and is owned by a guy who’s very knowledgeable and dead-honest (if not terribly inexpensive). Took my E36 in there years ago with a really loud ticking coming from the top of the engine. Being pretty naive, I was thinking there might be a valve issue that was going to cost me a fortune and was fully ready for the bad news. Paul took me out of the office, told me to start the car, said, “Loose spark plug, probably #6, take it home and torque it properly”. I’ve never gone anywhere else since.

  18. This is an important topic for me as I decided some years ago that I really don’t like working on cars. I get wildly frustrated with stuff that many of you seem to just work through. Since I’ve driven used Bimmers for the last 25 years or so, my criteria for a shop have boiled down to these two:

    1) NOT a dealer
    2) An indy shop that specializes in German cars, if not BMWs.

    After trying a couple of different places that qualified, I’ve settled on a shop that’s close enough for me to walk to, that works on any BMW, and is owned by a guy who’s very knowledgeable and dead-honest (if not terribly inexpensive). Took my E36 in there years ago with a really loud ticking coming from the top of the engine. Being pretty naive, I was thinking there might be a valve issue that was going to cost me a fortune and was fully ready for the bad news. Paul took me out of the office, told me to start the car, said, “Loose spark plug, probably #6, take it home and torque it properly”. I’ve never gone anywhere else since.

  19. I take my cars to the same shop my parents have been using since I was a baby. They’ve always been great. About a month before my kid was born I decided that my car’s brakes were worn out. I could just feel it while driving. They called me about an hour after I dropped it off and told me the brakes were fine. It was just a little new dad panic. They didn’t even charge me to look at the car.

    Word of mouth would be how I choose another shop. I don’t know a better way to do it unless there is something about the shop that raises obvious red flags.

  20. I take my cars to the same shop my parents have been using since I was a baby. They’ve always been great. About a month before my kid was born I decided that my car’s brakes were worn out. I could just feel it while driving. They called me about an hour after I dropped it off and told me the brakes were fine. It was just a little new dad panic. They didn’t even charge me to look at the car.

    Word of mouth would be how I choose another shop. I don’t know a better way to do it unless there is something about the shop that raises obvious red flags.

  21. After taking my Mercedes to the dealers for years, they ignored an issue which cost me $2000 because the factory decided that the differential never needed fluid replacement and the dealers never deviated from that.

    So now I take it to a well-recommended local German car independent specialist.

  22. After taking my Mercedes to the dealers for years, they ignored an issue which cost me $2000 because the factory decided that the differential never needed fluid replacement and the dealers never deviated from that.

    So now I take it to a well-recommended local German car independent specialist.

  23. There’s a local family-owned shop that I use for mounting and balancing tyres, as well as inspection for my vehicles. It’s not much, but they do a good job, and the inspector has let me know things like “hey you’ve got a little exhaust leak that I figure you can handle, so deal with that before I see you next year” and without fail I have taken care of it.

    For the 996, there’s an independent Porsche specialist near me. I used them for the PPI, and have had enough conversations with the proprietor that I trust him. He’s also done an excellent job of maintaining my trust by saying things like “don’t worry about that; it’s money you don’t need to spend”.

    I bought my BMW motorcycle — in part — because I have a well-regarded independent BMW mechanic ~10 minutes away from my house. I’ve gone to him for advice and work when I feel over my head (like a full engine rebuild).

    I have not taken my Vespa to a mechanic, yet, and I honestly kind of doubt I will. I’ve maintained it, myself, and it’s really easy to work on. If something goes HORRIBLY wrong I may take it to my BMW mechanic, to be honest.

    So: independent shops with an expertise in the vehicles I own, and a history of dissuading me from spending too much money.

  24. There’s a local family-owned shop that I use for mounting and balancing tyres, as well as inspection for my vehicles. It’s not much, but they do a good job, and the inspector has let me know things like “hey you’ve got a little exhaust leak that I figure you can handle, so deal with that before I see you next year” and without fail I have taken care of it.

    For the 996, there’s an independent Porsche specialist near me. I used them for the PPI, and have had enough conversations with the proprietor that I trust him. He’s also done an excellent job of maintaining my trust by saying things like “don’t worry about that; it’s money you don’t need to spend”.

    I bought my BMW motorcycle — in part — because I have a well-regarded independent BMW mechanic ~10 minutes away from my house. I’ve gone to him for advice and work when I feel over my head (like a full engine rebuild).

    I have not taken my Vespa to a mechanic, yet, and I honestly kind of doubt I will. I’ve maintained it, myself, and it’s really easy to work on. If something goes HORRIBLY wrong I may take it to my BMW mechanic, to be honest.

    So: independent shops with an expertise in the vehicles I own, and a history of dissuading me from spending too much money.

  25. In addition to all the great thoughts offered thus far, I’m a big fan of trying a new place with some reasonably small repair/issue, and seeing how they do, overall.

    That’s how I found my motorcycle shop – they sorted what turned out to be ethanol-clogged carbs (yeah, I got religious about ethanol-counteracting additives thereafter) with speed, communication, and solid work at a good price.

    And I knew they were a keeper when they asked if I could pick her up before the weekend, as they were campaigning a bike at the Daytona 200 so needed to close the shop for awhile. “There’s just going to be some kid here answering the phones, so…”

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