Service Drives Score Better Despite Longer Wait Times
J.D. Power study shows longer appointment wait times driving business to after-market providers.

Mass-market vehicle owners are waiting an average of 5.2 days for a dealer service appointment.
IMAGE: Pexels/Cottonbro Studio
Vehicle owners say they’re more satisfied with dealer service department service, despite continued parts and labor shortages that have extended the wait for appointments.
J.D. Power’s 2024 U.S. Customer Service Index Study found overall customer satisfaction rose five points to 851 on a 1,000-point scale.
That's even though mass-market vehicle owners are waiting an average of 5.2 days for a dealer service appointment, up from 4.8 days a year ago, while premium-vehicle owners wait 5.4 days, a slight improvement. The waits are moving many to after-market service, J.D. Power says.
“… capacity and wait time issues have gotten progressively worse since the pandemic and show no immediate signs of easing up,” said Vice President of Automotive Retail Chris Sutton said in a press release on the study findings.
He pointed out that owners of battery-electric vehicles, or purely electric models, are experiencing the worst service experience on the whole, excluding Tesla owners.
“As sales of BEVs continue to grow and the industry moves out of the early-adopter phase, the typical owner will not be as willing to tolerate a less-than-stellar service and ownership experience,” said Sutton, who indicated that there’s a higher rate of manufacturer recalls of BEVs contributing to that dissatisfaction.
For non-Tesla BEV owners, a lack of trust in dealer service drives to make complex repairs and give practical guidance to owners feeds dissatisfaction.
Originally posted on Auto Dealer Today
More Industry

Pennsylvania Dealership Under New Retailers
The sale of the Chrysler Dodge Jeep Ram store puts a family auto group on a leaner path as first-time dealers take the helm.
Read More →
Battery Storage Takes Priority Over EVs
U.S. automakers are prioritizing battery energy stationary storage over electric-vehicle production as the consumer demand for EVs lags the rest of the world.
Read More →
Auto Dealers Feel Better But Not Great
A second-quarter Cox Automotive poll of franchised retailers and independents found better views of the current market after a good spring but anticipation of third-quarter storminess.
Read More →
New-Vehicle Sales Picture Relative
A May forecast is complicated by last spring’s trade tariff effects on auto retail. Despite continued hard realities, many consumers took advantage of ways to bite the bullet.
Read More →
Auto Group Acquires Third Nissan Rooftop
Iowa-based Coleman Automotive Group recently acquired its seventh dealership, McGrath Nissan, which it renamed Nissan of Elgin.
Read More →
April Less Affordable
Based on prices, reduced incentives and slower household income growth, consumers found it more challenging to buy new last month, Cox Automotive reported.
Read More →
Building an Extraordinary F&I Agency
Work to determine your specialized talent, because that fact will determine everything about your agency’s future.
Read More →
Recipe for Compliance
The secret to both amazing barbecue and compliance is the same: understanding the basics and committing to a process.
Read More →
EVs Getting More Attractive
A growing percentage of U.S. consumers are open to switching and fewer are adverse to the idea, according to a recently completed survey. That’s despite the end of a tax break.
Read More →
EV Sales Drop in April Following Surge
North American electric-vehicle sales were down 28% year-over-year, a sharp contrast from global EV sales growth of 6%.
Read More →