When that “check engine” light comes on, there’s a good reason to get
worried. Even if it doesn’t leave you stranded in an unfamiliar part of
town after dark it’s likely to take a bite out of your savings,
especially as recent studies have indicated automotive repair costs rose
by about 10 percent last year.
That is, of course, an average
that varied significantly by region. Vermont saw repair costs decline
last year, according to a new study by automotive service site CarMD,
making it America’s most affordable place to take your car in. At the
other extreme was New Jersey where the typical visit to a service shop
cost almost 50 percent more than in Vermont.
Traditionally, the
West Coast is the place where repairs have been most expensive. But in
its latest annual car-repair cost survey, CarMD found California among
the Top Five, with the rest of those spots filled by states along the
Eastern Seaboard, including not only The Garden State but North
Carolina, Maryland and the District of Columbia.
Repairs
in the Northeast rose 11.6 percent in 2012, faster than the rest of the
country, according to a study of 161,000 repairs.
"In 2012, we
saw a dramatic shift in the top five most expensive states for average
car repairs, as many drivers along the East Coast incurred rising
auto-repair costs, while they simultaneously contended with Hurricane
Sandy's aftermath," CarMD CEO Leon Chen noted. "Car owners in many
states also continued to put off small repairs, contributing to
cumulative failures with increased repair costs."
Apparently, the
“superstorm” was not only the cause of serious, flood-related damage but
led many East Coast motorists to discover other problems that needed
repairs.
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While
New Jersey was the most expensive place for repairs -- at an average
$392.99, including parts and labor -- Washington, D.C. saw the biggest
overall increase, with repair costs jumping 20 percent compared to 2011
“This
is partially attributed to the type of repairs being made,” noted
CarMD. “Time-consuming repairs that cost over $1,000 accounted for
nearly 10 percent of D.C. repairs in 2012, as compared with 7 percent in
2011, while quick-fix, gas cap-related problems were down five points.” Though
repair costs, on the whole, were up last year, there were a few notable
exceptions, such as Vermont. In Wyoming they fell, on average, by 17
percent.
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Anytime
you go to the service shop you’ll wind up having to pay for a
mechanic’s time. Colorado topped the list there, with an average $150.75
per visit. Vermont had the lowest labor cost, on average, at $115.90.
If
you needed parts, the survey found that you likely paid a stiff premium
in New Jersey, at an average $256.28, compared to Vermont, which had
the lowest average, at just $153.82. The state-by-state gap was
especially apparent when it came to new hybrid vehicle technology.
Replacing a battery in Nevada ran an average $4,409.94 last year.
Jersey motorists actually caught a break here, however, with the lowest
cost to replace a hybrid battery, on average just $2,005.05. Incidentally,
two of the states with the lowest average repair costs – Iowa and South
Dakota – were found in the Midwest while two were located in the South
or Southeast, Delaware and West Virginia.
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