One man rents a car, spots the windshield toll tag, and conducts a full DIY project by peeling it off so he can use his own toll pass.
The man swears he saves coins by bringing his own transponder instead of paying expensive per-day rental toll fees.
But then the plot twist: Hertz and Enterprise insert their expertise into the situation with valid concerns. Translation: Don’t touch the tag. Don’t cover the tag. Don’t even look at the tag with bad intentions. The brands told outlets that removing or tampering with toll devices can violate your agreement, trigger fees, and still send tolls to your bill via the license plate. So even if you bring your own gadget, that plate camera might snitch.
Some roads let you add the rental’s plate to your own toll account. Good in theory, but if the road cameras catch the plate before your account does-or the rental company’s system fires first-you can still get hit with admin fees. Chaos mode unlocked.
Toll programs charge a daily fee on days you use a toll. It’s not illegal; it’s just pricey. And the companies say messing with the hardware is a no-go, could count as damage, and won’t guarantee you aren’t charged anyway.
If you’re set on using your own transponder, the safer route is asking at the counter about opting out, checking the local toll rules, and seeing if you can register the rental plate to your account. Do not, repeat, do not get handsy with the windshield hardware like it’s a sticker book.
The post Man Peels Off Rental Car Toll Tag to Use His Own-Hertz and Enterprise Say Don’t appeared first on Entertainment SA.
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