Automotive retailers are sitting on a largely untapped source of revenue that is easily within their grasp. Unrepaired vehicle safety recalls represent a $36 billion industrywide opportunity. These vehicle repairs can provide dealers with additional parts and service revenue, which can boost profitability in both good times and bad.
Unrepaired safety recalls are a chronic challenge for the automotive industry. According to AutoAp Inc. research, about 20 percent of all vehicles on the road have one or more unrepaired safety recalls at any given time. Several factors contribute to this, including confusing discrepancies and timing delays between sources of information, human error entering recall data, and good old-fashioned consumer apathy about perceived minor repairs.
With nearly 230 million vehicles that are 2000 model year or newer on the road, there are approximately 46 million with unrepaired safety recalls. Our data shows that many vehicles have more than one unrepaired recall for an average of 1.25 each, which means a total of 57.5 million recalls available to be repaired. According to the National Automobile Dealers Association, the average recall parts and service repair reimbursement is $440. In addition, AutoAp clients generate $250 to $430 in additional customer pay during each recall visit. That means 46 million vehicles with 1.25 recalls at $440 each, plus another $225 in added repairs each (to be conservative), for a potential of more than $36 billion.
On a per-dealership basis, assuming roughly 16,800 franchised dealerships, that comes to at least $2.1 million in potential additional revenue per dealership. That's a lot of money just waiting to be made. And, with new recalls coming out every day, the opportunity continuously refreshes.
Why aren't more dealers taking advantage of this potential windfall?
Many dealership owners mistakenly assume they are covered from a liability standpoint. Due to data errors and timing delays, many open recalls fall through the cracks and dealers are NOT covered. Period. This needs to change, industrywide.
In addition, dealers often simply ignore the revenue-generating potential of finding and fixing open safety recalls because it is not the "sexy" end of the automotive retail business.
Finding open recalls using manual processes is time-consuming, expensive and error prone, so many dealers simply don't take advantage of the opportunities to find recalls by monitoring current inventory or customers' vehicles. An automated process that checks against multiple industry sources, provides dealers with daily updates on inventory and periodically checks customers' vehicles is an efficient method for finding open recalls. This helps dealers limit liability and drive additional revenue, and is quite easy to implement.