Renting a car in the USA? Watch out for invisible tolls

on the road e1296906668331 Renting a car in the USA? Watch out for invisible tollsThink of it as an invisible road hazard.

Three months after Joan Cox rented a Ford Fusion rental car in Orlando last summer, a surprise bill from Thrifty Car Rental landed in her mailbox. The company wanted 50 cents for a toll violation on the Beachline Expressway, a toll road that connects Orlando with the East Coast beaches and the Kennedy Space Center.

Oh, and one other thing: there was a $25 “administrative fee” for processing.

Cox, an information systems specialist from Wilmington, Del., didn’t recall blowing through any tollbooths during her Florida vacation. So she did a little sleuthing.

“It appears this has happened to many visitors over the last several years and is really quite an issue — almost a scam,” she says. “This also appears to be a setup to out-of-state travelers and a moneymaker for rental car companies.”

Motorists have made such accusations ever since there have been toll roads. Sometimes the charges stick. Back in 2008, MSNBC.com consumer advocate Bob Sullivan reported that a company called Violation Management Services, which processes toll violations for car rental companies, promised its customers online that it could turn “a costly customer service headache into a profitable customer service solution.” The company cleaned up its act after that report, removing the incriminating language from its Web site.

Such complaints are becoming more common as all-electronic toll roads get powered up nationwide. In 2010, the North Texas Tollway stopped accepting cash, making it the largest toll road to go cashless. Earlier this year, Florida’s Turnpike moved to an all-electronic system in Miami-Dade County. Anyone driving from Miami International Airport to the Florida Keys would be likely to face an invisible toll. Several other roads in Florida are scheduled to go cashless soon, including Miami’sAirport Expressway and Dolphin Expressway.

Here’s how it works: If you have a transponder, your account gets charged after you pass through the tollbooth. But if you don’t, the system takes a snapshot of your plate and subsequently mails you — or, if you’re in a rental car, the rental agency — a bill. On Florida’s Turnpike, for example, that bill comes with an extra $2.50 administrative fee — not $25.

“This can be such a tough situation to explain to a customer,” says Kathleen Hernandez, a spokeswoman for Dollar Thrifty Automotive Group. The company receives “thousands” of toll, parking and traffic violations each month from all the municipalities across the country. It then has to match the renter to the violation, which can be time-consuming. Thrifty charges $25 for a 50-cent violation because it’s a lot of work to figure out that Cox was responsible for the fine.

Thrifty goes out of its way to disclose the toll roads, according to the company. It hands out brochures warning of the tolls and pointing out which roads they apply to. It also offers, for a fee, an automated service called Rent a Toll that notes the license plate of the rental car and passes the toll charges along to the customer at the end of the rental. Some locations even permit renters to activate the service retroactively when they return a car if they suspect that they’ve failed to pay a toll.

“Ms. Cox’s frustration is understandable — and we do take some flak for the process, but we have honestly worked to provide options for the customer,” says Hernandez.

As to the assertion that this is a rental car scam, the car rental industry insists that it’s not. “This is not a profit center for the car rental companies,” says Bob Barton, president of the American Car Rental Association. “But unfortunately, we have been forced into a situation to provide such a system to facilitate the toll collections for the state.”

That’s definitely something to be aware of the next time you rent a car. You could find yourself driving down a toll road where your money’s no good, or worse, get hit with a toll months after your vacation. Even with the new toll roads, rental companies, citing the high cost of equipping their entire fleet, have made electronic transponders optional.

Incidentally, Cox doesn’t buy Thrifty’s explanation. She says that no one handed her a brochure when she rented her car, and no one offered to let her pay for any tolls retroactively. Even if they had, she would have turned them down, because she says she didn’t even know that she was driving on a toll road.

I’m inclined to believe the car rental industry when it says that it’s doing everything it can to disclose the road hazards and that it has no choice but to comply with the toll collection system. But that’s not the problem. Car rental companies could make every vehicle electronic-toll ready if they wanted to. Would it cost the companies more? Sure. Would it reduce the number of complaints? Absolutely.

Letting a car with no working transponder off the lot in 2011 is like renting someone a car without seat belts or windshield wipers. It’s irresponsible.

Scammed small cover 1 Renting a car in the USA? Watch out for invisible tolls

Christopher Elliott is the author of Scammed: How to Save Your Money and Find Better Service in a World of Schemes, Swindles, and Shady Deals. Critics have called it “eye-opening” and “inspiring” — it’ll “grab your attention and won’t let go.” Pre-order your copy now!

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Top New York Hotel Deals

If you’ve decided to take a trip to New York then be prepared for the high cost of accommodation in the world’s most famous city. Be sure to have a look at the hotel costs online before you book your flights or you could end up blowing your budget on a place to stay. As always, resource your flights and travel insurance online to ensure you are getting the best prices before you commit to anything.

Online Savvy

Use your online savvy to explore all of the offers available on the various hotel discount sites. You can take advantage of early bookings or last minute bookings. The nature of the travel industry flows on supply and demand and so by either getting early and securing the cheapest rooms first, or waiting till the last minute to scoop up the unsold rooms you will have the best chance of saving money.

Membership Deals

Sometimes becoming a member of a chain of hotels, frequent flyer programmes or credit card rewards systems can ensure you get the best deals offered to you first. Not only will you get the heads-up over everyone else, but you will probably get loyalty credit and the best discounts they can offer.

Recommendations

A recommendation from a friend can be invaluable information when looking for a place to stay in New York. That hostel you have your eye on might be cheap but it may located above a night club that plays loud music all night, or it might be the size of a shoe box or the heating might be broken or worse than anything, it might not be safe. So unless you are young enough not to care or simply can’t afford not to, it might be best to stay away from hostels in the Big Apple, because it could cause you more hassle than the saving is worth.

Mid-Priced Hotels

So if your not doing hostels and can’t afford the swanky places, take a look at the moderately priced hotels on offer. Sometimes you can save money by getting a room with a shared bathroom, which might not sound particularly attractive, but could save you up to one hundred dollars per night! Some of the hotels to consider are Hotel Thirty Thirty, Chelsea Savoy Hotel, Cosmopolitan Hotel Tribeca, The Gershwin, The Marcel, The Larchmont Hotel, Red Roof Inn, New Yorker Hotel and The Milburn.

Location

It’s all about location in New York City. If you want to stay close to all the sites, then be prepared to pay for it, no matter how humble your digs. So think outside the square a little, you can look at the suburbs around town like Harlem, Tribeca, Soho or Hamilton Heights. If you are very serious about getting the best hotel deals for your trip to New York, then you will look even further by going outside of Manhattan to suburbs like Queens, Brooklyn or Hoboken. A twenty-minute ride on the subway will take you out of the main drag and into the suburbs where you will get a much better deal on accommodation and also get a look into how the locals live.

Finding the right hotel usually means getting in early, because everyone else is after the same deal and New York is an extremely popular holiday destination. Jump on the computer and start surfing to secure the best hotel deal, online travel insurance and compare flight costs and you will be sure to get yourself the best value for money.

Save money on your travel insurance today. For a free quote, visit Travel Insurance. Article Source

Listing of New York hotels by distance from NYC

Some people might prefer not to be right in the city, but to stay a little way outside, and others might want to take their vacation as far away from the city as possible! Well, this listing will help you choose a hotel according to its distance from Central Park – no matter what your preference on location, this list should help you find just what you want.

Listing of other accommodation in NY state

Today’s addition to the site is a listing of non-hotel accommodation outside New York city. This includes motels, inns, bed and breakfast hotels, hostels, resorts, apartments and vacation rentals.

Listing of other accommodation in New York City

Work is continuing on our mission to bring you the information you need to choose a hotel or other vacation accommodation by whatever criterion you choose! Today’s addition is a listing of New York City motels, inns, bed and breakfasts, hostels and resorts.

Enjoy!