
Maybe it is the third time the service advisor has recommended a brake fluid flush with all the enthusiasm of someone reading a shopping list. Maybe it is the invoice that somehow costs more than last year's, despite the car doing fewer kilometres. Maybe it is the creeping feeling that nobody in the workshop actually remembers your car.
Whatever the trigger, the question lands: is this still worth it?
The warranty years are simple. Everything after is not.
While the factory warranty is active, dealer servicing makes obvious sense. The car is new. Software updates flow through the manufacturer's system. Any gremlins that surface get handled under warranty, no arguments, no out-of-pocket surprises. If servicing was bundled into the purchase price or capped for the first few years, there is genuinely no reason to look elsewhere.
The complication starts the day the warranty expires and nobody sends a memo explaining what just changed.
What changed is this: the dealership's obligations ended, but their pricing didn't. The car still gets the same templated service schedule it received when it rolled off the lot. The difference is that a five-year-old BMW driven mostly on suburban school runs and a five-year-old BMW that commutes 40,000 kilometres a year on the Hume have wildly different needs. Dealer servicing, by design, treats them identically.
That is not negligence. It is scale. Dealerships service hundreds of cars a week across multiple models and generations. Standardisation is how they keep the operation running. But standardisation and the kind of attentive, tailored maintenance an ageing European car actually needs are two different things entirely.
What the invoices reveal (and what they don't)

Dealer vs independent specialist: what actually differs

| Dealer service centre | Independent European specialist | |
|---|---|---|
| Best suited for | Warranty-period cars, recall work, manufacturer software updates | Post-warranty cars, long-term ownership, complex diagnostics |
| Service approach | Standardised schedules across all vehicles of that model | Tailored to the individual car’s condition, mileage, and use |
| Parts sourcing | Genuine manufacturer parts at retail pricing | Genuine, OEM-equivalent or quality aftermarket, depending on the job |
| Technician continuity | May see different technicians each visit | Typically the same team sees your car every time |
| Communication style | Formal, system-generated reports and recommendations | Direct conversation with the person who worked on the car |
| Labour rates | Premium, reflecting franchise overheads | Generally lower, reflecting leaner operations |
| Service history recognition | Universally recognised during warranty period | Recognised by informed buyers; valued when thorough and well-documented |
The resale value myth that keeps people paying more than they should
Ask any owner why they are still taking their out-of-warranty Audi to the dealer and there is a fair chance the answer involves resale value. It is one of the most persistent beliefs in car ownership, and one of the least supported by what actually happens in the second-hand market.
For a European car that is three or four years old with low kilometres and a full dealer history, yes, that stamped logbook carries weight. It signals the car has been maintained within the manufacturer's ecosystem during the period when it matters most.
But for a car that is seven, eight or ten years old? Buyers at that end of the market are not comparing dealer stamps. They are looking for evidence that someone genuinely cared about the vehicle. A detailed, consistent service history from a reputable independent specialist, one that shows what was done, why, and what was monitored, often inspires more confidence than a string of dealer invoices that read like they were generated by software. Because, frequently, they were.
Three signs it is time to make the switch


The moment it clicks
The right time to leave the dealer is not a date on the calendar or a number on the odometer. It is the point where the owner's intent shifts from compliance to stewardship, from following a schedule someone else wrote to actively managing the health of a car they plan to keep.
For most European car owners, that moment comes sooner than they expect. And almost without exception, the only regret is not making the move earlier.
FAQs about servicing and dealerships
No. You are not legally required to service your car at a dealership, even while it is under warranty.
Under Australian Consumer Law, vehicle manufacturers cannot force owners to use a dealership for routine servicing or repairs as a condition of maintaining their warranty.
What matters is that:
- The servicing follows the manufacturer’s specifications
- The work is carried out by a qualified repairer
- Appropriate parts and fluids are used
- The service is properly documented
If those conditions are met, your warranty remains valid, regardless of whether the work is done at a dealership or an independent workshop.
Yes. These protections apply nationally, including all parts of New South Wales.
The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission has been clear on this point. Warranty coverage cannot be refused simply because servicing was performed outside the dealership network.
Logbook servicing does not have to be performed by a dealership. An independent workshop can complete logbook services provided they follow the manufacturer’s schedule and specifications.
For many owners, this becomes particularly relevant once the car is out of warranty, when servicing decisions are no longer tied to manufacturer compliance.
There are limited situations where returning to a dealership makes sense, such as:
- Manufacturer recall work
- Warranty repairs
- Software updates that are only available through the manufacturer
Outside of these scenarios, owners are free to choose where their car is serviced.
Where to find more information
Understanding these protections allows owners to make servicing decisions based on what suits their car and their plans, rather than fear of losing warranty coverage.


