Home | Contact Us | FAQ | Search & Site Map | Link to Us
Sign In | Join | Other 45 Sites in Network
HomeAnnouncements
Discussion Groups
By Brand
BMWChevroletDodgeFordGMHondaLexusMercedes-BenzNissanPeugeotToyotaVolkswagenOther Brands
By Topic
4x4 CarsRVsDrivingMaintenance & RepairCar AudioCollectible Cars
Country Specific
Australian ForumsUK Forums
ArticlesAuto InsuranceBuyingCars & TechnologyMaintenanceMiscellaneousSafety
DMV Resources
Related Topics
MotorcyclesBoatsMore Topics ...

Car Forum / Lexus Cars / September 2004

Tip: Looking for answers? Try searching our database.

Lexus Maintenance Costs!  Ouch!

Thread view: 
Enable EMail Alerts  Start New Thread
Thread rating: 
Phil - 13 Sep 2004 22:57 GMT
We need to get a replacement second used car and were looking at the IS300
and older GS300s.  I called the dealer to ask about maintenance costs, as I
am being eaten alive by our incredibly unreliable '95 Honda Odyssey van.  I
was stunned by what the dealer told me.  I am hoping someone can validate
the maintenance frequency and costs, so I can get an accurate handle on
costs.  The frequency does not make sense to me.

Every 10k miles.  $170
Every 15k miles.  $360
Every 30k miles.  $600
Every 90k miles.  $1300

At that rate, it is over $4,000 for 90k miles, or 4.5 cents a mile!  I have
a BMW M3 and it doesn't cost anywhere near that to maintain.  If these
figures are wrong or the frequency is wrong, please let me know.  Would hate
to make a buying decision based on bad info.  Also, what Lexus model might
be cheaper to maintain?

- Phil
ESmith - 13 Sep 2004 23:02 GMT
I just bought a used 2003 300 RX in Apr.  Just had the 25k service.  Cost me
$116.  Just basically an oil change, tire rotation, clean air filter, lube
rubber suspension components, check brakes, and a car wash.  I think I can
find a competent mechanic to do the same things for a lot less.  Hope this
helps.

Signature

Ed Smith

> We need to get a replacement second used car and were looking at the IS300
> and older GS300s.  I called the dealer to ask about maintenance costs, as I
[quoted text clipped - 15 lines]
>
> - Phil
Elmo P. Shagnasty - 13 Sep 2004 23:43 GMT
> We need to get a replacement second used car and were looking at the IS300
> and older GS300s.  I called the dealer to ask about maintenance costs, as I
[quoted text clipped - 10 lines]
> At that rate, it is over $4,000 for 90k miles, or 4.5 cents a mile!  I have
> a BMW M3 and it doesn't cost anywhere near that to maintain.

The dealer would LOVE for you to come in and do his maintenance schedule
and pricing.

What you need to do is see the owner's manual and add up the individual
service items that the manual calls for.

Good example:  my 02 Odyssey hit 30K miles last month.  I asked the
dealer, how much for a 30K service?  $370, he said.

Hmmmm.  I already had my own schedule in hand, having gotten that from
the book.  The necessary items:  new air filter, new cabin air filter,
oil change, brake fluid change, inspect brakes.

I did the air filter myself; $10.  I did the cabin air filter myself;
$25.  I had them do an oil change, brake fluid flush, and rotate the
tires (and while he was doing the tires, I asked, "How do the brakes
look?").  $100 even, out the door.

Total:  $135.

They would have charged me $40 for the cabin air filter and $72 to
install it.  Thanks, no.  If I had to, I'd remove it and not reinstall
it if replacing it was a $110 item.  No thanks.

I bet I could have had the corner garage do the mechanical work they
did, with equal results.

Your Lexus is worse; they charge more for both parts and labor.  Hey,
that fancy dealership building costs money to maintain.
D.D. Palmer - 13 Sep 2004 23:45 GMT
You need to find a good independent mechanic and avoid the dealer as much as
possible. Read the owner's manual carefully. Do what IT says needs to be
done and AVOID the hyped service schedules that APPEAR to be factory
recommendations but in reality are just dealer "severe service"
recommedations adopted for everyone. Pay attention to timely fluid changes
and the timing chain (if applicable). The rest generally should only be done
as needed.

> We need to get a replacement second used car and were looking at the IS300
> and older GS300s.  I called the dealer to ask about maintenance costs, as
[quoted text clipped - 15 lines]
>
> - Phil
Steve Larson - 14 Sep 2004 02:46 GMT
You can request what service you actually want performed.  My Lexus dealer
charges about 2 to 2.5 times what my Toyota dealer charges for simple
things, like tire rotation, balance, and 4 wheel alignment.  I've decided I
will only use Lexus for my oil changes and warranty work, and Toyota for all
else.

> We need to get a replacement second used car and were looking at the IS300
> and older GS300s.  I called the dealer to ask about maintenance costs, as
[quoted text clipped - 15 lines]
>
> - Phil
larry barrios - 14 Sep 2004 07:13 GMT
Steve Larson sent this message::

>You can request what service you actually want performed.  My Lexus dealer
>charges about 2 to 2.5 times what my Toyota dealer charges for simple
>things, like tire rotation, balance, and 4 wheel alignment.  I've decided I
>will only use Lexus for my oil changes and warranty work, and Toyota for all
>else.
>  

Why Lexus oil change?  Something special about their oil?
Steve Larson - 15 Sep 2004 02:32 GMT
Not much basis, I've heard rumors that the oil filters are a higher quality
than Toyota.  I don't have any proof of that.  The Lexus oil change actually
costs under $30, and they give a free loaner, so I don't mind using them for
the oil change.  Also, the oil changes will be recorded in the service
database for my car, which could (possibly) help with resale.

> Steve Larson sent this message::
>
[quoted text clipped - 5 lines]
>>
> Why Lexus oil change?  Something special about their oil?
Doug in VA - 14 Sep 2004 02:52 GMT
> We need to get a replacement second used car and were looking at the
> IS300 and older GS300s.  I called the dealer to ask about maintenance
[quoted text clipped - 10 lines]
>
> - Phil

Luxury car dealers charge high rates.  What you quoted is actually cheap for
a Lexus dealer; mine wants $499 for a $15K maintenance for an ES330, which
buys an oil change, transmission flush, and new air filter (plus
"inspection" of a bunch of things).  If you just buy those services from
them, its cheaper: they charge $230 to flush the transmission fluid, and $55
for an oil change; so doing those two alone would "only" cost $285 (and you
can get an air filter for $20 at an auto store and put it in yourself) --  
cutting the price in half.  If the luxurious waiting room, convenient hours,
and ultra-courteous service are really important, then it may be worth it to
you.  Otherwise, consider an independent shop.

Regarding cheaper Lexus models to maintain: If you really want to have a
dealer do the work, then consider getting an ES330 or RX330; these are
mechanically identical under the hood to the Camry and the Highlander, so
some Toyota dealers are willing to work on them.  And, Toyota dealers charge
less than Lexus dealers.

-Doug in VA
markjen - 14 Sep 2004 04:59 GMT
These costs are a little high but probably fairly representative of what
dealers are charging these days.  I don't understand the 10K services-
typically Lexus specifies that you do either one or two oil changes between
the 15K services and they should run somewhere around $75 or so.

You can cut these costs dramatically by a little DIY, finding a good
independent mechanic, shopping among dealers and looking for specials, and
making sure they only do what is specified by Toyota, not their gold-plated
recommendations for extra service.  You can probably cut the costs by
one-third to one-half this way.

I'm unsure why you find spending $4K In 90K miles that out of line.  Nor do
I understand how you can maintain a BMW M3 for less.  When I owned an M3,
the prices for services at the BMW dealer were about the same as the Lexus
dealer.  If you're spending significantly less, then you're either cutting
corners or doing some of the measure I mentioned above.  There is no way I'd
consider a BMW an inherently cheaper car to maintain, other than the free
service during the warranty period.

If you're just going to throw the keys at the dealer and say "do the checks"
then $4K in 90K miles is about what it takes to maintain any premium car.

- Mark
Phil - 14 Sep 2004 08:25 GMT
I take my '98 M3 to an independent shop which is about 70% the cost of the
dealer.  Oil changes are around 10k miles at $80, for 7 quarts of synthetic
oil and filter.  The 25k service is about $400 and the 50k service about
$670.  The rates may be no better than Lexus, but following the BMW
maintenance lights on the dash has me taking the car to the shop quite
infrequently.  Over the several years I have owned the '98 M3, a '91 Honda
Accord, and a '95 Honda Odyssey van, all serviced at independent shops, the
routine and expected maintenance on the M3 has been less.  Mostly due to the
more frequent visits the Honda require.  The BMW has no timing belt to
replace which also helps cut maintenance costs.  On top of all of that, the
M3 reliability has been markedly superior to the Hondas.

I am mechanically inclined, so if self maintenance is possible on the Lexus
to some degree, I will do that.  Now, just to find a competent independent
Lexus shop in the San Francisco Bay area.

- Phil

> These costs are a little high but probably fairly representative of what
> dealers are charging these days.  I don't understand the 10K services-
[quoted text clipped - 20 lines]
>
> - Mark
markjen - 14 Sep 2004 15:43 GMT
Well, my personal opinion is that the lesser frequency of the "lights on the
dash" in the M3 means you're simply servicing the car less often - you could
service the Lexus less often as well and the costs would line up better.
There is nothing about an M3 engine that says it can go 15K miles between
oil changes while the Lexus requires them at 7.5K - you simply maintaining
the Lexus better which will pay off if you drive either car beyond 100K or
so.  If I had a M3 and I was planning on driving it awhile, there is no way
I'd be leaving oil in there for 15K miles.

Things can break either way - you've gotten lucky with you M3 (mine required
a new short block at 30K), but many find the Toyota products more reliable.
You pays your money and takes your chances.  I own two BMW products right
now (a Mini Cooper and R1100S motorcycle), so I am a fan of their products
also, but they can give you no end of problems.

- Mark
Elmo P. Shagnasty - 14 Sep 2004 17:56 GMT
> If I had a M3 and I was planning on driving it awhile, there is no way
> I'd be leaving oil in there for 15K miles.

Synthetic oil?  On a car that's being driven fairly gently?  Sure.

And the car knows how it's being driven, and adjusts for that.  You're
using the loud pedal all the time?  The light will adjust downward for
oil change intervals.
markjen - 15 Sep 2004 06:50 GMT
> Synthetic oil?  On a car that's being driven fairly gently?  Sure.
>
> And the car knows how it's being driven, and adjusts for that.  You're
> using the loud pedal all the time?  The light will adjust downward for
> oil change intervals.

No it won't.  the MRS in these cars are mostly miles/cold-start based.
Drive it gently or drive it like you stole it and it won't make a
significant difference.  Telling whether an oil is worn-out, is something
that takes a pretty sophisticated lab - the little MRS's in cars today are
just a gross approximation.

- Mark
Phil - 14 Sep 2004 18:57 GMT
Yes, I am servicing the M3 less often, but that reduced frequency is what
BMW recommends.  The fact of the matter is that the Lexus maintenance
schedule calls for the car to be serviced more frequently than BMW does.  I
could service the Lexus less often than called for, but then I could do that
for the BMW as well.

I never said the M3 engine could go 15k miles between servicing.  As I
pointed out, oil changes are generally around 10k miles intervals, with
other intervals at 25k and 50k.  The car computer analyzes how you drive and
adjusts those values accordingly.  So, the mileage numbers vary.  In the
end, the M3 tells me I am due for one of three things, an Oil Service,
Inspection 1 or Inspection II, and calls for one of them every 10k miles or
so, the way I drive.

Some BMW models, perhaps all, calculate one mile driven as two miles if the
engine is over 5000 revs, or if the engine is cold.  It will count one mile
driven as four miles, if you drive it over 5000 revs AND when cold.
Therefore, you can reach a predetermined service mileage sooner or later
depending on driving habits.  The service lights will never allow 15k miles
to pass before maintenance is required.

In regards to oil change intervals, I would not leave any oil in the car for
15k miles either and BMW does not allow it in this car.  Nonetheless, some
BMW enthusiasts have had their oil tested after running for 10k miles and
found the oil in perfectly usable condition.  This is synthetic oil.

I doubt either of our singular experiences with our BMWs are representative
of BMW reliability as a whole.  You can always find exceptions to
reliability.  My note was on regular scheduled maintenance, not reliability.
Both cost money, if either are poor, but reliability also brought about a
surprise.

The plastic radiators in my M3, Honda Accord, and Honda Odyssey, all failed.
I replaced them myself, but the surprise was that the parts, ordered over
the Internet, were cheapest for the BMW.  I ordered a kit for the M3 that
included a new radiator, water pump, aluminum thermostat housing (replacing
plastic one on car), thermostat, and two fan belts.  Price?  $250.  The
radiators alone for the Hondas were almost that much.  Synthetic oil for the
M3, from the dealer was $5.50 a quart, $.50 a quart more than any synthetic
at Wal-Mart.  I'd expect the M3 brake discs to be hideously expensive, as
they are different on all four corners and are not the same as any disc on
any other BMW.  But, on the Internet, they can be had for $57.47, and this
is a Brembo disc.  A Brembo disc for an ES300 is $51.84.  There are cheaper
discs for the ES300.

I will say that the savings over Internet ordered parts for BMW is huge,
more so than for Lexus.

I ride motorcycles, me neighbor has I think the same bike you have, and have
had many cars, and all can have problems, but I have to look at the overall
picture, the experiences of many.  I'd even buy another Honda since they are
generally reliable, but the last two I have had are terrible.  Exceptions.

- Phil
> Well, my personal opinion is that the lesser frequency of the "lights on
> the dash" in the M3 means you're simply servicing the car less often - you
[quoted text clipped - 12 lines]
>
> - Mark
markjen - 15 Sep 2004 06:56 GMT
Phil, all I can say is that the difference in Lexus and BMW maintenance
intervals is not due to technical differences in the cars.  It is due to
Lexus not having a free maintenance program and BMW having one.  And because
each company is deciding to make their own tradeoffs between a wide variety
of factors that influence how their cars sell, their reputation in the
marketplace, and how much money their dealers make on service business.
It's an economic decision, not a technical one.

Certainly if you believe it following things "by the book", then the BMW
might have a significant advantage.

- Mark
Phil - 15 Sep 2004 08:00 GMT
Understood, but I doubt BMW is extending service intervals to the extent to
compromise the durability and reliability of their cars.  I would be more
inclined to believe that Lexus is over maintaining their vehicles for more
profit.  After all, the car won't suffer for it.

Fact is, given the prices of parts on the BMW and service costs (low), one
might dare say BMW makes their money more on the purchase price than
servicing.  I can not speak to all the technical differences that could and
do make maintenance differences, but there are some that do make a
difference.  The M3 uses no timing belt, and that is a significant
maintenance savings over an engine that does.

- Phil

> Phil, all I can say is that the difference in Lexus and BMW maintenance
> intervals is not due to technical differences in the cars.  It is due to
[quoted text clipped - 8 lines]
>
> - Mark
Elmo P. Shagnasty - 15 Sep 2004 11:22 GMT
> Understood, but I doubt BMW is extending service intervals to the extent to
> compromise the durability and reliability of their cars.

My concern there is that since the huge bulk of BMW's business is leased
cars that are turned in at 3 or so years, BMW doesn't care about the
durability and longevity.
markjen - 15 Sep 2004 16:15 GMT
>> Understood, but I doubt BMW is extending service intervals to the extent
>> to
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
> cars that are turned in at 3 or so years, BMW doesn't care about the
> durability and longevity.

Lexus leases a lot of cars too.  But the gist of this is correct - ALMOST BY
DEFINITION, service intervals are a compromise.  It is a sliding scale of
maintenance costs vs. future replaceement/repair costs.   Where the mfg sets
the bar is completely arbitrary and driven by marketing more than
engineering.  It most definitely is a compromise.

- Mark
markjen - 15 Sep 2004 16:12 GMT
> Fact is, given the prices of parts on the BMW and service costs (low), one
> might dare say BMW makes their money more on the purchase price than
> servicing.  I can not speak to all the technical differences that could
> and do make maintenance differences, but there are some that do make a
> difference.  The M3 uses no timing belt, and that is a significant
> maintenance savings over an engine that does.

Wait until you have VANOS problems or the shock towers rust out.  All cars
have problem areas - as you've pointed out, don't infer too much from
limited data.

- Mark
Rlstockman - 16 Sep 2004 02:41 GMT
"Wait until you have VANOS problems"

What the hell is a "VANOS" Mark?

Bob in Atlanta
markjen - 16 Sep 2004 06:17 GMT
> What the hell is a "VANOS" Mark?

BMW's variable valve timing mechanism.  Has proven to be  problematic with
high miles in early iterations, particularly the E36 M3.

- Mark
DirkDiggler - 24 Sep 2004 19:38 GMT
> Understood, but I doubt BMW is extending service intervals to the extent to
> compromise the durability and reliability of their cars.  I would be more
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
>
> - Phil

I hardly believe that Lexus is over maintaining their cars. After all
JD Powers has had Lexus as the leader in reliability for what ? 7 years
running? Where is BMW on that list? Not even in the top 3 or 5 last
time I checked.
Curtis Newton - 24 Sep 2004 23:24 GMT
>> Understood, but I doubt BMW is extending service intervals to the extent to
>> compromise the durability and reliability of their cars.  I would be more
[quoted text clipped - 8 lines]
>running? Where is BMW on that list? Not even in the top 3 or 5 last
>time I checked.

The dealers clearly add additional items to their checklist that
aren't in the owner's manual.

For example on our RX330, they wanted to change the transmission fluid
at 15,000 miles.  I looked in the manual, it doesn't show a change
until 60,000 miles.  It isn't like they did an analysis on the fluid,
they simply wanted to replace it because on their checklist that is
what they did.  This was at the low price of $149!

Our 88 Camry just turned 306,000 miles and still on the original
engine (oil changes about every 4,000 miles)  and transmission (fluid
changes every 30,000 miles), so I figure that works nicely.

I will end up changing it at 30,000 miles just to be safe.
TWW - 15 Sep 2004 00:08 GMT
> We need to get a replacement second used car and were looking at the IS300
> and older GS300s.  I called the dealer to ask about maintenance costs, as I
[quoted text clipped - 15 lines]
>
> - Phil

That's less than what I had to pay for a RX 300. $150.00 at 5 & 10k miles.
$500 at 15k -- $150 each at 20 and 25k and $750 at 30k. I traded at 30k when
I found out what services cost at 60 & 75k.  Operating costs for any Lexus
will be higher than for a Honda.
DaViT - 16 Sep 2004 07:44 GMT
I found that "a passion for perfection" also mean "doing your own
maintenance".

So just coat your garaga floor with epoxy, buy a stainless steel tool
box, tons of tools, a thick book of repair manual, and start telling
your wife she looks like Jill Allen.

> We need to get a replacement second used car and were looking at the IS300
> and older GS300s.  I called the dealer to ask about maintenance costs, as I
[quoted text clipped - 15 lines]
>
> - Phil
Elmo P. Shagnasty - 17 Sep 2004 00:06 GMT
> I found that "a passion for perfection" also mean "doing your own
> maintenance".
>
> So just coat your garaga floor with epoxy, buy a stainless steel tool
> box, tons of tools, a thick book of repair manual, and start telling
> your wife she looks like Jill Allen.

And spend WAY more than what the dealer wants in buying and maintaining
your tools.
jeremiah - 18 Sep 2004 04:34 GMT
>> I found that "a passion for perfection" also mean "doing your own
>> maintenance".
>>
>> So just coat your garaga floor with epoxy, buy a stainless steel tool
>> box, tons of tools, a thick book of repair manual, and start telling
>> your wife she looks like Jill Allen.

BTW, it's Jill Taylor, (Pat Richardson), TV wife of Tim Taylor, (Tim Allen),
on the hit show Home Improvement.  Too bad it's been cancelled, it was a
good family oriented show.  Probably why it's gone, not enough "perversity"!
JCS - 16 Sep 2004 21:30 GMT
For what it's worth - here are the intervals and rates at one of the dealers
in the Dallas area.

5k       $ 100
15k     $ 310
30k     $479
90k     $1,500 (timing belt)

JS

> We need to get a replacement second used car and were looking at the IS300
> and older GS300s.  I called the dealer to ask about maintenance costs, as I
[quoted text clipped - 15 lines]
>
> - Phil
Curtis Newton - 16 Sep 2004 23:40 GMT
>We need to get a replacement second used car and were looking at the IS300
>and older GS300s.  I called the dealer to ask about maintenance costs, as I
[quoted text clipped - 7 lines]
>Every 30k miles.  $600
>Every 90k miles.  $1300

I change my own oil (Mobil 1 5W30 and Toyota filter for a total of $25
an oil change) and Discount Tires rotates/balances for free.

But, I do have the dealership perform the 30K service.

So, for me it is:

Every 5K:  $25
Every 15K:  $40 (air filter and cabin filter)
Every 30K:  $350 (I specify which items I want serviced, typically
transmission, radiator, filters, brake fluid)

So, if you follow the owner's manual, vice the dealer's schedule, you
can save some $$$$$$ and still maintain your vehicle well.

-
--
cnewton.remove-this@akaMail.com
Anti-Spam filter in place--
 <delete .remove-this to respond to email>
 
Sign In
Join
My Latest Posts
My Monitored Threads
My Blog
My Photo Gallery
My Profile
My Homepage

Start New Thread
Enable EMail Alerts
Rate this Thread



©2008 Advenet LLC   Privacy Policy - Terms of Use
This website includes both content owned or controlled by Advenet as well as content owned or controlled by third parties.