Car Renters More Satisfied
Study finds those who rent at airports had a better experience in previous year.

Satisfaction with renting could take a hit from the union strikes in Detroit if they reverse some of the inventory gains that have helped improve renting conditions.
IMAGE: Pixabay/OleksandrPidvalnyi
Rental car customer satisfaction, after eroding during the pandemic based in part on elevated prices, took a turn for the better this year, at least at airports, a J.D. Power report says.
The 2023 North America satisfaction study said price stability and improved vehicle availability and staffing bumped renter satisfaction 14 points on its 1,000-point scale.
“The post-pandemic period has been tough for North American rental car companies and their customers, but now that things have stabilized, customer satisfaction has started to increase significantly,” said Michael Taylor, managing director of travel, hospitality and retail at J.D. Power.
Overall customer satisfaction rose to 843. J.D. Power ranked Enterprise tops for customer satisfaction in the study for the third year in a row with a score of 866, followed closely by National at 865 and Alamo at 862.
The study polled more than 8,600 business and leisure travelers in the 12 months ended in August who rented vehicles at airports in the previous year.
Satisfaction with renting could take a hit from the union strikes in Detroit if they reverse some of the inventory gains that have helped improve renting conditions, Taylor said.
“Given the tight correlation we see between vehicle availability, price and customer satisfaction, it’s going to be important to keep an eye on the UAW strike as a potential supply chain issue that could negatively affect customer satisfaction during the course of the next year.”
More Dealer Ops

Ladies and Gentlemen, This Is a Dealership: Why the Fundamentals Still Decide Who Wins
A teaching moment by a legendary football coach happens to apply perfectly in the auto retail space. Learn what it is and how to use it to your store’s advantage.
Read More →
Timing the Market Can Hurt Long-Term Program Performance
For dealer-owned reinsurance entities, avoiding volatility entirely can mean falling behind inflation and missing market rebounds that drive long term surplus growth. Missing just a handful of strong market days can materially impact cumulative returns—an important reminder for long horizon trust and investment strategies.
Read More →
Dealer Ads and the FTC
The agency has made it clear in recent enforcement actions and warnings, in auto retail and other industries, that advertised prices must include all nonoptional costs to the consumer.
Read More →
Used Autos Supply Dwindles
The March shopping surge, despite high prices, cut into inventory by the most since the thick of the pandemic, Cox Automotive analysts calculated.
Read More →
Managing Risk Effectively Through Changing Times
The variables influencing risk pricing have changed significantly over the past five years. Being proactive and responsive to emerging trends is not optional but essential.
Read More →
Survey Reveals What Won't Fix What's Breaking Car Sales
AutoPayPlus says extra-long auto loans are trapping consumers and threatening the dealer trade-in cycle, and that the industry is leveraging the wrong tools to combat high MSRPs.
Read More →
IA American Appoints Two Execs
Senior vice presidents of the company's agent and dealer channels chosen to support general agents and help auto dealers with sales and performance.
Read More →
Cox Automotive Acquires Inspection Firm
Full ownership of Alliance Inspection Management, or AiM, meant to unlock growth for Manheim inspection capabilities
Read More →
Assurant Expands Partnership With Holman
Extended collaboration delivers training, products and performance development to 30 newly acquired Holman dealerships
Read More →
Franchises, Throughput Down in First Half
A handful of states see franchise growth through June, while EV sales per store boost overall business in U.S.
Read More →