Car Dealers Are Scamming You With Fake Services – Stop Getting Ripped Off

Service advisors earn commissions on unnecessary repairs, turning routine oil changes into costly upsells

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Al Landes Avatar

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Key Takeaways

Key Takeaways

  • Service advisors earn commission on unnecessary repairs, turning oil changes into expensive upsells
  • Fuel injection cleaning costs $800 but uses $10-20 additives available at parts stores
  • Owner’s manual maintenance schedules override dealership profit-driven service recommendations completely

Sitting in that dealership waiting room while your service advisor rattles off a laundry list of “urgent” repairs feels like getting pitched a timeshare in Cabo. The pressure is real, the stakes feel high, and somehow your simple oil change just became an $800 adventure. Here’s the uncomfortable truth: service advisors work on commission, making every routine visit a sales opportunity targeting your wallet, not your car’s needs.

The Fuel System Con Game

Modern engines don’t need expensive cleaning services that cost 20 times their actual value.

Fuel injection and throttle body cleaning top the unnecessary service charts. Your advisor presents this like emergency surgery, but modern gasoline contains detergents that keep systems clean automatically. That “professional cleaning” they’re pushing? Usually, a $10-20 bottle of fuel additive is poured into your tank—the same stuff you could buy at any auto parts store.

Manufacturer maintenance schedules rarely list this as routine unless you’re experiencing actual drivability issues like rough idling or misfires. Most modern vehicles simply don’t require these services under normal operating conditions.

The Fluid Flush Fantasy

Premium coolant and transmission services ignore what your owner’s manual actually requires.

Dealerships love pushing coolant flushes at every opportunity, despite modern vehicles requiring coolant replacement every 100,000 miles or more. That expensive “full flush” procedure? Usually unnecessary when a simple drain-and-fill does the job.

Transmission flushes present even bigger problems—many modern transmissions use “lifetime” fluid, and flushing can disturb sediment, causing more damage than protection. Independent mechanics consistently warn that if your owner’s manual doesn’t specify these services, you’re being sold snake oil.

Your Owner’s Manual Beats Their Sales Pitch

The definitive guide to necessary maintenance sits in your glove compartment, not their service bay.

Service advisors suggesting cabin air filters at every oil change (easily DIY-replaced in minutes for under $20) or routine alignments with tire installations aren’t following engineering—they’re following profit margins. These alignments are only needed for pulling or uneven wear, not as routine additions to tire services.

Check that manual before agreeing to anything beyond your scheduled maintenance mileage requirements. Your car’s actual needs trump their sales targets every time.

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