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Rental Company Tries To Charge Extra Day, So He Made Sure They’d Remember The Pickup

by Layla Bui
October 20, 2025
in Social Issues

Returning a rental car should be simple. Park it, drop the keys, and go. But when a driver followed every instruction given to them and still got threatened with an extra day’s charge, they decided to teach the rental company a lesson in literal compliance.

If they were being billed for another day, they were going to use that day. What happened next involved farm roads, heavy rain, and one extremely muddy car.

By the time they came back, the employee who refused to cancel the charge couldn’t hand over the refund fast enough. Sometimes, justice looks a little dirty.

A man followed the rental company’s return instructions exactly, then got slapped with an extra day charge anyway

Rental Company Tries To Charge Extra Day, So He Made Sure They’d Remember The Pickup
not the actual photo

'Rental car company told me where to leave my keys and when I left them there, tried to charge me for an extra day. So I refused to give them...

I rented a car for five weeks while my car was being repaired from a car accident.

The rental company had a couple great policies- no cleaning fee no matter how gross the car was, and unlimited miles.

Ideal for me, I live in the country and going anywhere is a drive.

When my car was finally scheduled to be finished (a Monday evening) I called the rental car company on Sunday.

Asked about return details. They said return time would be 530pm Monday,

but I could just leave it at the shop and leave the keys in the shops drop box.

I said sure, and next night I went, got my car, left keys in the box.

Got in my car, and check engine light is on. F__k. Staff says come back tomorrow and we will fix it.

I go home thinking that I will be sitting at the shop all Tuesday because no other ride.

Tuesday morning I wake up at 7am to the rental car company very angry

and saying that they can't get into the drop box and shop doesn't open til 9.

I tell them I just did what they said to do. They told me that they would be charging me an extra day.

At that I'm furious. I leave my house later and arrive at the ship at 850. Rental car guys aren't there.

I sit around and shop opens, I grab the rental keys and give them my car.

Right on time, rental car guys appear. They demand the keys and I ask if I'm still getting charged for an extra day.

One guy is inspecting the car while the other tells me yes, I'm getting charged an extra day.

Guy inspecting it comes over and days car looks good, it should be ready to rent out immediately.

I had cleaned it the day before because I didn't want to be a d__k. Well, I refuse to give him the keys.

"Since I'm getting charged an extra day, that means it's my car until 530 today, right?"

At that he gets nervous. Says they need the car back.

"I will give you the keys now if you don't charge me an extra day. But if I'm charged an extra day, I'm using it."

He refuses to bend so I leave. At this point I'm petty and angry. So I go straight home.

I own a farm and it has been raining like mad lately. I get to work.

By the time 10am rolls around, the car is COVERED in mud. Like, this black car looks painted brown.

I didn't trash the inside, because I'm not that petty. I hop in the car and drive to the rental place.

I'm pretty covered in mud at this point, I had put trash bags on the front seat to limit it.

I walk into the rental place looking like I fell into a mud pit. The guy who refused to cancel the charge looks horrified.

I tell them "this car is great for mudding! I'm gonna go mudding for the rest of the day.

Just swinging by to ask where to put the keys at 530" I'm all smiles and dripping sweetness.

I watch the life leave him, his shoulders slump, and he says if I return the car now,

they will cancel the charge because they need to rent out the car.

I give em the keys and take an uber to the shop, where my car is ready.

No cleaning fee and no extra day charge. Ha!

OP later edited the post:

Edit: Alright, might as well address the few things yall are bitching about lol.

The Uber I called the Uber after I walked out of the rental car place. It took half an hour to arrive.

I had brought extra trash bags, so I stripped down a bit (shorts and undershirt)

and put on 2 trash bags that I cut holes in. Put my clothes in a bag. Let the mud on my exposed body parts flake off.

Did I look absolutely ridiculous? Yes. Did I get mud in some poor stranger's car? No.

I didn't want to actually ruin the day for some kid getting minimum wage.

That's why I only mudded the outside. That's a pretty easy clean.

I didn't wanna wreck anyone's day- even the a__hole that charged me.

My goal was to make the car messy and shocking enough to get them to not charge me

because they were desperate to get it back. "If the outside is that bad, what did he do to the inside?"

The car was 91 f__king dollars a day (first 3 weeks 39 a day and then went up for last 2 weeks to 91)

and my insurance did not cover it. I was not willing to let 91 bucks slide.

The keys were left at the auto shop, in the auto shops key box.

That key box was not open at 7am when rental car company went to get the car.

When I went around 9am to drop my car off, the auto shop opened the box for me and gave me the rental car keys.

Rental car people appeared a few minutes later. Sorry if spelling and grammar ain't great. It isn't a thesis.

Rental car disputes like this one are more common than many realize, especially when drop-off procedures are unclear or poorly documented.

In this situation, the renter followed the company’s instructions by leaving the keys in the designated after-hours drop box, yet was still threatened with an additional day’s charge.

From a consumer-rights perspective, the renter’s frustration and subsequent “malicious compliance” is understandable.

According to the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), car rental companies must clearly disclose all terms related to fees, return times, and drop-off procedures at the time of rental.

If an employee instructs a customer to use a specific return method (like a shop’s drop box), that instruction becomes part of the agreement.

As Consumer Reports notes, “When the rental agent gives verbal instructions, it’s wise to record the name, time, and details of the call or follow up with an email to protect yourself if the company disputes your compliance.”

The company’s attempt to charge an extra day because they couldn’t access the keys early in the morning falls into a gray area.

Most rental contracts specify that the return time is based on when the vehicle is available for inspection, not merely when keys are dropped off.

However, if the customer followed the exact instructions provided by the company representative, liability for that delay should not fall on the renter. Legal precedent typically favors the consumer when the company’s own process causes the problem.

The renter’s response, retaining possession of the car for the remainder of the paid period and making it clear he would “use it fully” if charged, was a form of protest that stayed within the boundaries of his rights.

While coating the vehicle in mud may have been excessive, it technically fell under the company’s “no cleaning fee” policy, making it a harmless symbolic statement rather than a contractual violation.

To avoid such disputes, experts recommend:

  1. Always confirming drop-off instructions in writing.
  2. Taking time-stamped photos of the car, odometer, and drop location.
  3. Immediately emailing or texting the agent or rental office confirming the return.

In summary, the renter acted within reasonable bounds given the company’s poor communication.

The situation underscores a larger industry issue: vague policies and inconsistent employee instructions often lead to avoidable customer conflicts.

Documenting every step is the best way to protect against unjustified fees or accusations in future rentals.

Check out how the community responded:

These Redditors shared similar frustrations with rental car companies, accusing them of double-dipping and unfairly charging customers for days they didn’t actually use

TexasYankee212 − Pretty crappy to charge you for the day that they had already rented that car to another person.

That was double-dipping rental of the same car for the same day.

pbj10101 − My mom was in a car accident a few years back. The shop that did the repairs was partnered

with "Nationally-known rental company" so they had a few cars on hand to lend out.

Anyway, after she got her car back, she left the rental with the shop;

they said they'd take care of everything...and forgot about it.

So the rental company is charging her for the extra days when she supposedly didn't return it,

the insurance won't cover it because it wasn't part of the two-week deal for her car getting repaired

and the shop employees are denying it was on their lot because they know they f*cked up. I hate people sometimes.

xtheory − I f__king hate rental companies. Especially Enterprise. My car was in the shop, and by contract,

the dealership has to provide me with a rental if they have one available.

They give me a new BMW X3 and I checked to make sure that the dealership

had paid for the full collision waiver insurance prior to taking possession.

They did and I drive off happy, even though I know my checkbook is about to be sodomized by the dealership.

Fast forward 5 days. I'm in the parking garage about to head home from work

and while I'm driving through it I notice a bee on my leg.

Somehow it got in my car and I'm freaking out because I'm deathly allergic to bee stings.

My leg involuntarily jerks and I mashed the gas pedal. The car lurches forward

and I end up side swiping a concrete support column on the driver side. The car is fuuuucked! Neither driver side doors open.

I limp it back to the dealership and walk into their Enterprise rental office to tell them about the damage.

They take the car and give me another. I drive off happy again, but check it thoroughly for bees.

About 2 weeks later I get a demand to pay from their Enterprise Loss Dept. They want $11k for the damages.

I politely told them that the dealership is the one who rented the car for me and they had a collision damage waiver.

Told them to contact the dealership. Thinking all was good, I didn't think about it any further.

Two more weeks pass and I get a collection demand from them, threatening to sue if I didn't pay them.

I was furious at this point. I marched my happy ass down to the rental office and ask for a copy of the damage waiver.

I also tell them to fax it to the lady in their loss dept that was contacting me.

About 3 hours later I get a call saying that they resolved the claim and I'd not have to pay.

F__king inept knobs can't even look at their own computer screens to see that a car was fully covered.

I had the new X3 they rented for me for another 2 weeks and drove the crap out of it across country, not

because I had to but because I could. They were super pissed because they try to take back and sell these cars

before they reach a certain mileage. I was 3k over that. Feelsgood.jpg. Not my problem.

These commenters connected the story to rental or landlord experiences, saying big companies often exploit customers and deserve clever pushback

[Reddit User] − Enterprise tried doing this to me. Parking lot in the front, key drop off in the back.

They had me on camera walking up to the box, putting my keys on WHILE looking at the camera, and walking away.

Two days later they called asking when I was going to drop my rental off

and that they would have to charge me up the a**. They didn’t like my reply

notreallylucy − I had a similar experience with an apartment. State law says landlords can't double dip:

they can't charge an early termination fee for breaking a lease if the apartment is leased to a new tenant.

I go and give my notice and I discuss with them how I'm going to look for a new tenant. They agree.

I find a perfect couple with great credit a day or so later.

I sent them to the apartment to do the credit check and they come back

and tell me that the landlord says the unit isn't available. I go to the landlord.

I'm told there's another unit on the other side of the complex that is being remodeled.

It was already rented out and was behind schedule. The apartment can't take my tenants

because the people for the remodeled apartment are going to stay in my apartment until theirs is ready.

Great! I say. Since you have a tenant, I don't have to pay an early termination fee. Well no, the landlord says.

I found this tenant, not you, so you still have to pay. I remind them of the state law,

which does not specify who finds the tenant. It just says they can't charge me

and charge the new tenant for the same days. Landlord starts to look shifty and says they aren't collecting rent from the new tenant.

This makes me believe the new tenant was either their friend

or they had screwed this new tenant over somehow and were trying to make it right by pulling a fast one on me.

I told them I found a tenant and they had violated the agreement

by refusing to even run their credit and that I wasn't going to pay a late fee.

If they were leasing out the apartment for no money, that wasn't my problem.

There was a lot more bickering before the end.

We moved out without checking out or leaving a forwarding address, we just left the keys in the apartment.

They called me a few days later bitching about a bunch of damage that didn't exist

and how I owed them money and, "This isn't the last you'll hear from us!"

I've had the same phone number for many years since then, but I've never heard a thing from them.

Ashitaka1013 − I once asked if I could vacate my apartment with less than 60 days notice

if they could find someone else to rent it in time and they said sure but if they couldn’t they wanted to do renovations first.

It was clear they weren’t going to look for a new tenant and were hoping I would just pay

for the last month and still move out allowing them to do renos without losing a months rent.

I said I wasn’t going to move out until the end of the last day I had paid for,

which wasn’t true since I already had a move in date for my new place, but I left a few things behind

so that I was still “using” the apartment for another month since I had been forced to pay for it.

They noticed a moved out and started doing renovations in the apartment

without getting permission from me or giving notice that they were going to enter the apartment.

Called them out on it and got my months rent back. Never make it easy for corporations to take advantage of you.

These users praised the OP’s petty yet justified revenge, calling it one of the best and most satisfying malicious compliance stories

talibob − Perfection. I bet that car was fun to clean.

MiguelitoCS − This is one of the best malicious compliance I’ve seen!

The policies some/most of these rental car places have are so anti-consumer that it’s hard to feel bad,

even though someone making minimum wage and had nothing to do with the decision probably had to deal with the cleaning.

javier_aeoa − I had put trash bags on the front seat to limit it Even when being a malicious b__tard, you're still a reasonable human being. I love you.

This commenter humorously pointed out how ridiculous it was

Hixie − They were repairing your car for five weeks and at the end of that the check engine light was on?

That's like, literally the simplest indicator the car can give to say it's not yet fully repaired!

Sometimes, following instructions exactly as given while creatively interpreting them can be the best form of revenge against corporate blunders.

This renter turned a simple key drop into a lesson on fairness, timing, and resourcefulness, leaving the company both shocked and compliant.

Have you ever had to creatively assert your rights against a company’s mistake? Share your stories below!

Layla Bui

Layla Bui

Hi, I’m Layla Bui. I’m a lifestyle and culture writer for Daily Highlight. Living in Los Angeles gives me endless energy and stories to share. I believe words have the power to question the world around us. Through my writing, I explore themes of wellness, belonging, and social pressure, the quiet struggles that shape so many of our lives.

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