Baltimore Sun Sunday

Customer arrives late; Dollar leaves him short

- By Christophe­r Elliott

A: You shouldn’t have to pay for a rental you didn’t use. But your case is problemati­c on several levels. You prepaid for your rental through Hotwire. The site sells discounted rental cars, but you don’t learn the name of the agency until you pay for a rental in full. There are no refunds.

Car rental companies typically will honor a reservatio­n when you’re late, but you shouldn’t expect them to wait that long. Dollar’s policy is to hold a car for two hours, which is pretty reasonable. And since your voucher is nonrefunda­ble — well, there goes your money.

Fair? I don’t think so. But totally preventabl­e.

You could have phoned Dollar directly and let it know you were late. Sometimes,

I recently paid Hotwire $530 to rent a car for a month through Dollar Rent a Car in San Juan, Puerto Rico. I was scheduled to pick up the car at noon, but I arrived at the counter at 3:15 p.m. with a prepaid voucher.

Part of that delay was caused by a missing suitcase and part to the lack of transporta­tion by Dollar to the rental location. These were situations over which I had no control.

A Dollar representa­tive told me the agency had no car for me. I attempted to call the telephone numbers on my invoice but was unable to make a connection with either. It was apparent that the rental agency had booked more cars than it had available, since I wasn’t the only person turned away.

In my retirement, I live to travel and experience new places. I’ve never once encountere­d a situation such as this one. Dollar is offering only a partial refund, which seems absurd. Can you help? as a courtesy, a rental company will hold your reservatio­n. According to Dollar, you didn’t call.

“There is no record that Mr. Samson called Dollar to notify of his delay,” a Dollar spokesman said.

Believe it or not, once your reservatio­n was canceled, the $530 was Dollar’s to keep. And at the risk of stating the obvious, let me add this: Booking a car through a company like Hotwire has its risks, and this is one of them. It doesn’t matter who is to blame for the delay; the agency still gets to keep your money.

Again, I’m in no way condoning this arrangemen­t. But if you agree to the terms, you’re bound by them.

You could have appealed this to an executive at Dollar. I list the names, numbers and email addresses of the rental agency’s customer-service executives on my consumer-advocacy site:

I contacted Dollar on your behalf, and it refused to refund your $530. But you decided to try Hotwire one last time, and Hotwire refunded your voucher.

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