With more than 120 auto hire companies on stunning Tenerife as well as a baffling amount of car hire agents, choosing which car leasing company to pick out can be a uninteresting experience.
Do you select a familiar name, and then realize an evenly reputable local car leasing firm is a great deal cheaper? Do you go for a business simply to find when you arrive that they don’t have an office near to where you’re staying?
At Cheap Tenerife Car Rental we believe that if we’re encouraging you to explore Tenerife’s countryside, then we should also provide some information to help you decide which car leasing business on Tenerife is best suited to your particular needs, so we’ve compiled this guide to help the decision making process.
Taking your hire car to La Gomera
Some people want to know if they can take their hire car to other Islands. Most car hire companies on Tenerife don’t allow this. Some, like CICAR, allow you to take your leasing car to La Gomera only. However, the cost for taking a leasing car, plus two passengers to La Gomera can be around €145 on the Fred Olson ferry and around €130 on the Naviera Armas ferry, so it might work out cheaper to hire a car once you’re there.
Petrol prices on Tenerife
Petrol is considerably cheaper in the Canary Islands than in many other places; at the time of writing, around €0.80 per litre for unleaded (sin plomo 98), obviously this varies. The island is well served by petrol stations, so most of the time you don’t have to be concerned about running out of fuel. However there are some extraordinarily long stretches where there aren’t any stations and we’ve included warnings about these areas in our website.
There are also extensive differences in prices between various companies on Tenerife. PCAN and Texaco are usually a few cents cheaper per litre than BP, Shell and Repsol with CEPSA falling somewhere in between.
Parking
It seems common sense, but having read the occasional report on travel watchdog websites of people having their hire car towed away, I’m not so sure. Treat parking exactly as you would at home.
Don’t park on yellow lines and be cautious where you see blue lines; these customarily mean you need to feed the parking meter.
Above all don’t assume that because everyone else is double parked, parking on crossings, corners and anywhere there is the smallest space, that you can do the same, unless you want to invoke sod’s law.
Insurance
It’s worth checking with your car insurance company if your policy covers you when driving abroad. If it does, you might not need insurance through the car leasing firm on Tenerife.