Your next rental car may be a hybrid, if a press release issued by Hybrid Rental Car is to be believed. The site claims “a lot more people” are asking to rent one of these more fuel-efficient vehicles.
Hybrid Rental Car seems to make a compelling case, arguing that higher energy costs have pushed the driving public to embrace hybrid vehicles.
With gas still over four dollars a gallon, renting a hybrid over an SUV or other gas guzzler can save customers hundreds of dollars on the cost of a trip. Choosing to rent a Prius or other hybrid car is not budget-friendly, but only eco-friendly and that has also come into vogue.
But there’s virtually no hard evidence that customer demand for hybrids has increased — only that major car rental companies are adding more of these cars to their fleets. For example:
- Enterprise has the nation’s largest fleet of hybrid cars, with approximately 5,000 vehicles. It offers four hybrid models available nationwide.
- Hertz is planning to add another 2,400 hybrid cars this year. It has hybrid car rentals at the company’s top 50 airport locations.
- Avis offers 2,500 hybrids in three classes, available primarily at major airports in California and cities including Portland, Seattle, Chicago, New York, Washington, and Boston.
- Fox Rent A Car, a Los Angeles-based discount operation, offers hybrids in Phoenix and seven locations in California.
All the new hybrids will help push the nation’s rental pool for the gas-sipping, emissions-cutting gas/electric vehicles to more than 10,000, according to Hybrid Rental Car.
That’s impressive. But other than saying that renting a hybrid is fashionable — which no one would argue with — there is no hard evidence that customer demand for these fuel-saving vehicles is on the rise. And the fact that some major car rental companies are adding hybrids to their fleets in some markets doesn’t mean travelers prefer hybrids.
In fact, based on my conversations with car rental customers, it is the price of the car — not the make or model — that’s the determining factor in a rental. That’s the problem.
You’ll usually (though not always) pay a higher day rate to rent a a hybrid when compared to a similar non-hybrid. The cost can range up to about $24 per day.
And in the end, that’s what may doom the hybrid experiment. Charging more for less is a tough sell, even for the enlightened motorist.


