If the policy is that the "customer must bring it back within 5% of what it went out on," why doesn't Hertz put that on its website?
Some redditors report something different:
ithinkthereforeisuck (funny username):
Hertz ran out of cars, gave me a Tesla with 80% on pickup. Super easy, no stress. Almost like you need charging infrastructure in the city to rent EVs… weird.
Hertz is like a caveman that got mad when the fire went out instead of just adding some wood
(Yes I know I’m complaining about part of the issue, end of the day hertz never should have bought and rented EVs in cities with sh-t infrastructure because no one want to deal with that)
https://www.reddit.com/r/teslamotors/comments/1culpk9/comment/l4khkid/
Foxhound199:
I charged it at the closest supercharger to 100%, drove less than 10 miles to drop it off and they still charged me a recharge fee. Hertz seems shady as he-l. I paid upfront, direct, showed taxes and fees included, but somehow there was 15% in additional taxes at the rental counter. What a bunch of scammers.
https://www.reddit.com/r/teslamotors/comments/1culpk9/comment/l4lwqi1/
CarltonCracker:
I had to charge my last hertz EV (non Tesla) to 100% when I returned it. Those batteries are gonna be wrecked if they keep treating them like gas tanks.
https://www.reddit.com/r/teslamotors/comments/1culpk9/comment/l4limjn/
I can't verify the stories of these particular redditors, but Hertz's EV recharging fees seem to be the source of a lot of complaints.
Hertz's EV recharging policy should be clearly communicated on its website. If the "customer must bring it back within 5% of what it went out on," the website should say that.