Depends on the car - but some of the combo deals are surprising.You bought two sets of pads, two rotors and two calipers for only $300 at Advance Auto?
Depends on the car - but some of the combo deals are surprising.You bought two sets of pads, two rotors and two calipers for only $300 at Advance Auto?
4 coated element 3 rotors and EHT pads all the way around for my Xterra, shipped to my house for under $200 - all in tax included not that long ago. - for the Xterra in my sig. Reman calipers are 80 bucks or so had I needed them. So close.You bought two sets of pads, two rotors and two calipers for only $300 at Advance Auto?
As a shop owner yes we sometimes win but more often you lose when you run in to complications, rusted bolts, bad parts etc.To quote: Brake work is gravy for shops and flat rate techs.
They beat the book time and come out ahead. On the other hand, I get it how they can lose on a job which is complicated with things going sideways and exceeding book time.
The parts discounts for shops is starting to be less while the parts cost more but still decent room for profit. For example just did front brakes on Range Rover and the pads list for $68.58 and I get them for $38.75 but the customer pays $64.99 over the counter so I make a good profit there....but the same vehicle needed an alternator last month and the difference between my cost and the over the counter price was just $16. It all depends on the parts to determine what profit I will see on parts.4 coated element 3 rotors and EHT pads all the way around for my Xterra, shipped to my house for under $200 - all in tax included not that long ago. - for the Xterra in my sig. Reman calipers are 80 bucks or so had I needed them. So close.
Shops get heavy discounts from the local parts stores. There costs are probably pretty close. Shops usually bill parts at retail, which depending on the part is double or more.
Yep. Not surprised by that price at all. I had 3-4 friends over the years who worked in auto dealerships. One was a top salesman , two were Service Department managers and the other was a shop floor technician supervisor. They ALL told me over ten years ago it was going to get super expensive to bring ANY job into delaership shops for repair work. Reason was : they are having so much trouble these days n really since around 2010 just simply getting young folks interseted enough to take those service tech jobs. This is even with them offering sign up bonus monies, extensive shop technician school training, benefits etc....So I took my GMC Yukon Denali for an inspection, they shop said it had brake issues, quoted me $1300 to fix it.
Upon examination, it ended up being all brake pads, 2 calipers, 2 rotors and bleeding the brakes. Got $300 in parts and did it myself in under 2 hours. Most of the time was spent jacking the car up and looking for the right sockets. I am slow and I have zero power tools. There is no way that was $1000 in labor. I spent 30 mins per wheel (and did 3/4, the 4th one didn't need it but I think the caliper is sticking thus needs replacement). I think a well equipped shop with a rack and all the tools ready can do it spending 15 mins per wheel, someone who does it every day.
No broken/seized bolts, no rusty lines, nothing special at all. I said I am picking up the car with no repairs and they acted shocked.
I get it that 98+% of the auto drivers out there don't do their own work, thus auto repair shops can exploit them. Because brake work sounds scary and most drivers out there can't tell a caliper from a you know what. I think I would have paid them $500, probably, parts plus labor. Or more if it needed the entire brake system rebuilt, like brake lines, power brake booster, master cylinder... etc. etc. What happened to these shops which did brakes only for low prices like $200 or such? I used to see them years ago, apparently not anymore.
YES, $1000+ for almost anything like a brake job is outrageous! Just taking advantage of folks who have no alternative. Sad.....Shop rate is just a convenience fee/tax you pay to not do the work yourself. Don’t like it do it yourself… and I am firmly in the “$1,000+ for brakes is ridiculous” camp, hence I do my own brakes.
Do you track overall margin on parts? How much has it gone down over the last while? I have no reason to care other than I am nosy. Not in that industry, and I don't use it much - I have taken my car to the shop 5 times in 30 years - outside tires and warranty, so it really doesn't affect me, just find it interesting.The parts discounts for shops is starting to be less while the parts cost more but still decent room for profit. For example just did front brakes on Range Rover and the pads list for $68.58 and I get them for $38.75 but the customer pays $64.99 over the counter so I make a good profit there....but the same vehicle needed an alternator last month and the difference between my cost and the over the counter price was just $16. It all depends on the parts to determine what profit I will see on parts.
On the flip side, $1,100 to pay someone else to replace the oil pan on my Durango? Money well spent!YES, $1000+ for almost anything like a brake job is outrageous! Just taking advantage of folks who have no alternative. Sad.....
Well, the job is more like computer science with grease and spark rather than a last legit recourse for the lazy schoolboys who are tad more "aggressive" and not committed to schooling. Then when EVs become the norm, the job might be like an electrician with the ability to change brakes.Yep. Not surprised by that price at all. I had 3-4 friends over the years who worked in auto dealerships. One was a top salesman , two were Service Department managers and the other was a shop floor technician supervisor. They ALL told me over ten years ago it was going to get super expensive to bring ANY job into delaership shops for repair work. Reason was : they are having so much trouble these days n really since around 2010 just simply getting young folks interseted enough to take those service tech jobs. This is even with them offering sign up bonus monies, extensive shop technician school training, benefits etc....
4 coated element 3 rotors and EHT pads all the way around for my Xterra, shipped to my house for under $200 - all in tax included not that long ago. - for the Xterra in my sig. Reman calipers are 80 bucks or so had I needed them. So close.
Shops get heavy discounts from the local parts stores. There costs are probably pretty close. Shops usually bill parts at retail, which depending on the part is double or more.
Yes, sorry - I didn't see where the OP said he got his - I assumed RA also.Was that from rockauto? A brick and mortar parts store is usually several times more expensive.
We grew up in a different time.
Just be thankful that you can still do it. There will come a time when you cannot.
I don't track it. We often times don't even markup for regular loyal customers so that alone would skew the data. I also don't know the actual data to prove how much "less" of a discount we get because parts vary widely in cost to discount ratio- I just notice it when I order known stuff and see it costing a little more.Do you track overall margin on parts? How much has it gone down over the last while? I have no reason to care other than I am nosy. Not in that industry, and I don't use it much - I have taken my car to the shop 5 times in 30 years - outside tires and warranty, so it really doesn't affect me, just find it interesting.