‘I Feel Preyed Upon’: Woman Pays Jiffy Lube $325 For Car Fix. Then Tech Tells Her It’ll Cost Another $900
“I’m back at Jiffy Lube.”
A mom of twin toddlers says she paid $325 for a refrigerant recharge at Jiffy Lube after her car’s air conditioning stopped working, only to be told minutes later that the real problem was the compressor and that fixing it would cost another $900. When she took the car to a second shop for a second opinion, they quoted her $2,200 for the same compressor job and told her the Freon she’d just paid for would need to be evacuated and recharged again.
Rhiannon (@relatablerhiannon) is a content creator and events organizer in Las Vegas. Her two-minute, 44-second TikTok shows her sitting in her car, visibly upset, with a caption reading “I’m back at Jiffy Lube.”
“$325 For Freon”
Rhiannon says she drives a 2018 model that is her family’s only car. Her initial concern was about tires, and she took the car in for a full diagnostic, whereupon two separate shops told her the tire issue was cosmetic and instead flagged routine maintenance items: brake pads, air filters, an oil change.
“Tell me why the very next day, Tuesday now, our A/C stops working,” she says. “Now I’m going to sound like a conspiracy theorist, but I know they didn’t go and break our A/C, but it’s like, what are the odds, right?”
She took the car to Jiffy Lube because it was the only shop open. They diagnosed low refrigerant and charged her $325 for a Freon recharge, per Rhiannon.
“And then they’re like, oh no, it’s not the Freon. It’s an air compressor issue. That’s going to be $900 something,” she says. “Well now I just feel like preyed upon.”
The Second Quote
Rhiannon pulled the car from Jiffy Lube and drove to a second shop on a personal recommendation. That mechanic told her the Freon would need to be evacuated again before they could work on the compressor, even though she had paid for it less than 12 hours earlier. His quote: $425 for the refrigerant work, a $180 diagnostic fee he agreed to waive after she started crying, and $2,200 for the compressor itself.
“So now here I am in Vegas with no AC with one car for our family of four, twin toddlers,” she says. “It’s about to be 110-degree summer.”
She’s not exaggerating by much. Las Vegas average highs top 105 degrees Fahrenheit in July, with June and August regularly clearing 100. Driving without air conditioning in that heat with small children isn’t merely a comfort issue, it’s a genuine safety concern.
Why A Recharge Doesn’t Fix A Bad Compressor
The sequence Rhiannon describes is a familiar frustration for drivers: a shop sells a refrigerant recharge as the fix, and then discovers the underlying problem is mechanical. An A/C recharge tops up the refrigerant in the system, but if the compressor has failed, the fresh Freon has nowhere useful to go.
Jiffy Lube’s own service page describes its A/C evacuation and recharge as “periodic maintenance rather than A/C repair” and says the company “does not recommend servicing systems with detected leaks or damage.”
Whether the Jiffy Lube location Rhiannon visited detected damage before or after recharging the system is unclear from the video. What is clear is that she purportedly paid $325 for a service that did not restore her air conditioning and was then quoted $900 more at the same shop.
A/C compressor replacement is one of the more expensive common repairs. Industry pricing benchmarks put the typical cost between $1,000 and $1,350 for parts and labour at an independent shop, with luxury and European vehicles potentially running higher. The $2,200 quote Rhiannon received at the second shop is on the steep end but not unheard of depending on the vehicle.
What Does Nevada Law Say?
Nevada’s auto repair consumer protection statutes require shops to provide a written estimate before beginning work on any job over $50 and to get the customer’s authorization before exceeding the original estimate by more than $100 or 10%, whichever is greater.
Customers also have the right to inspect replaced parts and to receive an itemized invoice. If a shop performs unauthorized or unnecessary work, the customer can file a complaint with the Nevada DMV, which regulates repair facilities in the state.
“I Had This Happen Last Year”
Several commenters shared their own A/C repair bill stories.
Angel Khonesavanh wrote, “I had this happen last year with A/C and it is how it works. I had a compressor issue and it was like $1,400 too but had to do it because of the summer.” Angel also pointed to the broader cost squeeze facing car owners: “The new average car payment is $750 a month.”
Commenter kristy described an even grimmer outcome: “A/C messed up, quoted $4k to fix because they were going to have to take out the dash to fix. Said no thanks and they charged me $360 to diagnose it. Did nothing. I ended up just trading in and buying a new car.”
Tiffany offered practical help: “I have a recommendation for a family owned mechanic as a single woman that I trust with everything. Been going to them for years.”
Several other Vegas-based commenters chimed in with their own trusted-shop recommendations.
Danyell Rose suggested a possible path to recovering the Freon cost: “Jiffy Lube can remove that Freon for you to get the compressor fixed and then as long as you go back within a year it should be free to refill it.”
One commenter, koryng, raised a point that several others echoed: “It sucks as women we unfortunately are treated differently at car repair shops.”
Motor1 reached out to Rhiannon via email and to Jiffy Lube/Shell via their media spokesperson. We’ll be sure to update this if either responds.
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