AutoEurope - never again
On Saturday, I wanted to pick up the booked rental car at Budapest Airport with my wife and two kids and experienced something I've never experienced before. It was so disappointing that it ultimately ruined the first few days of my vacation.
When I picked up the rental car at a location about 5 minutes by shuttle from the airport, the first thing I was asked for was my credit card – not my driver's license or the order number.
When I handed the employee this (debit) card, he immediately chuckled and told me it wasn't valid. The same applied to my second and third debit cards, as well as my wife's credit card. He referred me to the terms and conditions, which clearly stated (somewhere in the quagmire of the 6 small-print pages of the A4 PDF) that only the driver's credit card could be used.
I offered the employee various options – PayPal payment, on-site bank transfer, my wife's credit card... but he just laughed at me (or at me) and declined everything.
He did, however, come up with a suggestion: He offered to let me use my debit card (instead of the mandatory credit card). However, I would have to pay an additional €280 for this. That's double the actual rental price, mind you. He called this an additional security measure.
I declined, whereupon he suggested a 20% discount on the said €280.
What followed was a heated argument. I admit I didn't have the best manners either. With 33 degrees Celsius, two tired children, and little sleep in the kitchen, I was simply at the end of my strength and understanding. Because one thing was immediately clear to me: someone was trying to rip me off.
Two colleagues intervened (one was very short-tempered, one very calm). They explained to me that I should have read the terms and conditions and that this was Hungarian law. I wouldn't be able to get a car anywhere in Hungary without a credit card.
After about 30 minutes, my wife, children, and I left the rental car company's yard without a car.
Back at BUD Airport, I tried my luck with the seven local providers: Sixt, Hertz, Europcar, Enterprise, WizCar, etc.
Of course, the prices were significantly higher than what I would have to pay with the dubious provider, after all, I wanted a car right then and there and without an existing reservation. But one thing was extremely interesting:
None of the seven (!) providers told me, when I asked, that I would need a credit card. I got a lock-up car from Avis – with the deposit and rental price paid with my debit card.
There's no question in my mind that you at AutoEurope are trying to rip off tourists. There's definitely no Hungarian law requiring a credit card.
In my opinion, this practice is fraud.
I had to endure being laughed at and insulted in front of my family and children—all because I didn't fall for the tourist rip-off.
This is a disgrace for your company!
July 5, 2025
Unprompted review