Skip to content
Tweak Your Biz home.
MENUMENU
  • Home
  • Business
    • Business
    • Finance
    • Technology
    • Growth
    • Sales
    • Marketing
    • Management
  • Mind
  • Tools
  • About

Tips for Effectively Managing Your Dealership’s Loaner Car Program

By Clayton Richard Published June 5, 2020 Updated October 2, 2022

For many dealerships, a fundamental way to increase customer loyalty and satisfaction is to have a loan car program, so people who need services or other work done on their vehicles aren’t stuck without wheels for days.

However, you need to manage these programs efficiently, so they don’t cost you more than they’re worth or cause too many headaches. Follow some key tips to keep things flowing optimally.

Utilize Tech Tools

Make life easier on yourself by utilizing the many tech tools on the market that can help you manage your loaner cars. For example, using relevant software programs, you can set up automated communications with customers. These messages, whether emails or texts, can update clients on factors like vehicle availability, pick-up and drop-off locations, rules about usage, and notifications when client cars are ready. Setting up these processes reduces the amount of time your staff needs to spend on communications, reduces the chance of mix-ups, and keeps customers in the loop.

It’s also helpful to take advantage of affordable connected car devices that make it quicker to tell, at a glance, the location and status of all your loaner cars. These kinds of programs can typically help you track mileage and maintenance on vehicles, tell if they’re overdue for return, and see when to move cars from location to location if you have multiple dealerships or warehouses. In turn, such software can help you to cut costs and improve the customer experience.

Leverage the Value of Programs

Running a loaner car program costs your dealership a significant amount of money each year, so make sure you extract the optimum value from it. Train staff members to use the availability of loaner vehicles as a way to help close sales and convert service bookings. For example, your team can offer loaners rather than discounts when people are thinking about whether or not to book their vehicles in for work, particularly if the expected wait time for services or repairs is longer than initially hoped.

Another way to use your loaner program is to have it help relieve waiting room pressure. During times when your service team falls behind, for instance, reduce the likelihood of having disgruntled customers (who might vent their frustrations online, publicly) by offering them a car to drive until their own vehicle is ready.

Establish Clear Guidelines for Customer Usage

To reduce potential issues with your loaner program, establish clear guidelines for customers when using one of your vehicles. Most people drive respectfully, pay tolls and petrol as asked, and return cars to dealerships promptly and unharmed. However, the reality is that you’re also likely to get some people who abuse the program.

Establish guidelines and go through these with customers before they get the keys to a loaner. You need to know they have read/heard the rules and acknowledge and understand them. Provide all the necessary information, including what happens if they don’t follow the guidelines, but also keep the details as simple as possible. You don’t want people to get bogged down in lots of legalese.

It’s a good idea, too, to try to determine what’s going on when people take advantage of your dealership. Is it that they’re merely inconsiderate, or that they misunderstood the information because it was too complicated, or handed to them after they already had the keys and didn’t think it was important? Do they know about penalties for returning a vehicle late or damaged? Or did they have to bring a car back late because their vehicle was behind schedule in your workshop?

Look for ways to reduce the likelihood of the same kinds of problems happening again and again. Get feedback from your service team and clients. Note, though, that sometimes you’ll have chronic abusers on your hands who are not going to change. In this case, it’s usually best to remove them from the program and explain the rules they violated, more than once, to get to that point.

Promote the Program

Lastly, don’t forget to promote your car loaner program, so all your current and potential clients know about it. This part of your operation can help you build a service brand and stand out from competitors that don’t offer such options. Mention the program on your company website, social media pages, and advertisements. Plus, ensure your salespeople clearly communicate it at various points in the customer’s journey.

A vehicle loaner program is an additional operational factor to manage each month, it’s true, but this set up can also have many benefits. Follow the tips listed above to help you maximize the program’s value for your dealership today.

rental car -DepositPhotos

More on this topic

  • How to know if you’re ready to venture on a start-up
  • How Can Companies That Manage Fleets Save Money Without Cutting Corners? Here’s What Actually Works
  • 5 Lessons Every Entrepreneur Can Take Away from Elon Musk
  • The Importance of Achieving GDPR Compliance if You Have EU Customers
  • Google’s +1 Experiment In Social Media
  • Obtaining a Residency Through Investment in Europe
Produced with AI assistance. Reviewed by the Tweak Your Biz editorial team before publication. See our editorial policy and about page.

About this article

This article is for general information only and is not financial, legal, or tax advice. Laws and regulations vary by jurisdiction. For your specific situation, consult a qualified professional. Editorial policy →

Posted in Business

Enjoy the article? Share it:

  • Share on Facebook
  • Share on X
  • Share on LinkedIn
  • Share on Email

Clayton Richard

Hi! I'm Clayton. I've been on several management teams over my career, I went to school for management (Go Tommies), and I'm currently a senior writer managing a team of creative content writers. My passion is excellent leadership, and I'm excited to share my thoughts with Tweak Your Biz readers.

Visit author linkedin pageContact author via email

View all posts by Clayton Richard

Signup for the newsletter

Sign For Our Newsletter To Get Actionable Business Advice

* indicates required
Contents
Utilize Tech Tools
Leverage the Value of Programs
Establish Clear Guidelines for Customer Usage
Promote the Program
More on this topic

Related Articles

Business

Before Ferrero shipped a single jar of Nutella in 1964, founder Pietro Ferrero invented the spread in 1946 as a solid loaf called Giandujot because postwar Italian cocoa rations were too scarce for chocolate — Piedmontese mothers sliced it onto bread for their children, and the company reformulated it into a spread when summers melted the loaves on grocery shelves

Tweak Your Biz Editorial Team June 30, 2026
Business

Frederick Smith wrote the business plan for Federal Express as a Yale economics paper in 1965 and reportedly received a C — eight years later, with the company unable to cover Monday’s jet-fuel bill, he flew to Las Vegas with the last $5,000 in the corporate account and won $27,000 at blackjack to keep the planes flying

Tweak Your Biz Editorial Team June 30, 2026
Business

Adi Dassler’s handmade spikes helped Jesse Owens win four golds in Berlin, then the German cobbler’s family workshop split into Adidas and Puma after a feud that divided a Bavarian town

Tweak Your Biz Editorial Team June 29, 2026

Footer

Tweak Your Biz
Visit us on Facebook Visit us on X Visit us on LinkedIn

Company

  • Contact
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Accessibility Statement
  • Sitemap
  • Editorial Policy
  • Corrections

Signup for the newsletter

Sign For Our Newsletter To Get Actionable Business Advice

* indicates required

Copyright © 2026. All rights reserved. Tweak Your Biz.

Disclaimer: If you click on some of the links throughout our website and decide to make a purchase, Tweak Your Biz may receive compensation. These are products that we have used ourselves and recommend wholeheartedly. Please note that this site is for entertainment purposes only and is not intended to provide financial advice. You can read our complete disclosure statement regarding affiliates in our privacy policy. Cookie Policy.

Tweak Your Biz

Sign For Our Newsletter To Get Actionable Business Advice

johnsmith@example.com