It will vary by locale, and whether it is a franchised shop, Goodyear, Midas, Napa, etc, a Dealership, or "backyard Bob." Dealership Shops around the Twin City Metro are charging around $200/hr these days. My go-to, Hudson Ford, Hudson, Wi charged $186.50/hr labor for struts & shocks install on my 2009 Mariner in August.What is a fair charge for a mechanic to install front struts, needing some eibachs installed
The tech's expenses are closer to $90, or more. Besides wages, add in Employer contribution to Social Security, Medicare, Workmans' Comp, private med ins., employer 401-K contribution, and training & recertification in many cases.$200/hr and the tech gets $30. what a rip off.
Just had the full front and rear changed by the ford dealership. 400-600 dollar estimates were what I was receiving from them and other shops.I'd take that in a second. I know some posted they can do each in under an hour, but...
You have no idea what they have to do to get certified.The price of manual labor for working on cars is a massive scam. They charge about 4x the cost to actually pay the employee and Admin staff. Don't forget they're already making a cut off the price of materials that they almost surely inflated. Someone once told me $200/hr for a mechanic (one) and I laughed and walked out. That's the cost of a manager at a professional services firm, not someone that took technical training for manual labor and probably didn't even go to school. To be clear there is NOTHING wrong with someone wanting to do that for a living, this is about prices.
Always negotiate labor costs.
This. You’re paying for their experience to do that job in that amount of time. The time they spent in school etc.You have no idea what they have to do to get certified.