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Short answer: no. But you'd be forgiven for thinking otherwise. If you've ever bought a new car, you've probably felt a quiet pressure to take it back to the dealership every time a service is due. The logbook has a box for their stamp, the salesperson mentioned it at handover, and somewhere in the back of your mind there's a worry that going elsewhere might void your warranty. It's one of the most persistent myths in Australian motoring, and it costs drivers a lot of money every year. Here's what's actually going on, and what your rights are. The Warranty Myth, Debunked Under Australian Consumer Law, you are legally entitled to have your car serviced by any qualified, independent mechanic without voiding your manufacturer's warranty. The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission has been explicit about this for years. Any licensed repairer can carry out your logbook service, stamp your book, and your warranty remains completely intact, as long as the work is done to manufacturer specifications using quality parts. The ACCC has also acknowledged that some manufacturers and dealerships have used confusing language in logbooks and service manuals to create the impression that dealer servicing is mandatory. It isn't. If a warranty claim is ever declined solely because your car was serviced outside a dealership, that's actually a problem the ACCC wants to hear about. There is one exception worth knowing: if you've purchased a separate extended warranty through the dealer (not the standard manufacturer's warranty that came with the car), that extended warranty may have its own conditions requiring dealer servicing. It's worth checking the fine print on any add-on warranty products. But your standard factory warranty? That's protected regardless of where you service. What a Logbook Service Actually Is A logbook service follows the specific maintenance schedule your vehicle's manufacturer has set out for that make and model. It's not a one-size-fits-all service. Different cars have different intervals, different fluid specifications, different components that need checking at different mileage points, and a proper logbook service accounts for all of that. The difference between a logbook service and a standard service is documentation and precision. A standard service covers the basics: oil, filters, a general check. A logbook service works through every item on the manufacturer's schedule for that particular interval, records it properly, and gets stamped in your logbook. That record matters for two reasons: it keeps your warranty valid, and it protects your car's resale value. A complete, stamped service history is one of the first things a buyer or dealer looks at when assessing a used vehicle. Why It Matters More Than People Realise Skipping logbook services, or substituting them with cheaper basic services, might save a bit of money in the short term. Over time though, the costs compound in a few ways. Manufacturer-specified maintenance exists because engineers have worked out exactly what a vehicle needs at each interval to perform correctly and last the distance. When those intervals get ignored or done incompletely, small issues that would have been caught early become larger ones. Worn brake fluid absorbs moisture and loses effectiveness. Timing belts stretch beyond spec and then break. Coolant degrades and the system starts running hot. None of these announce themselves loudly until they've already become a real problem. Then there's resale. A car with a full, properly stamped service history is worth noticeably more than the same car without one. Buyers pay attention to this, and so do dealers when they're valuing a trade-in. The money you save skipping services rarely offsets what you lose when it's time to sell. How to Know When Your Logbook Service Is Due Your logbook will tell you. Most manufacturers schedule services based on either a kilometre interval (commonly every 10,000 or 15,000 km depending on the vehicle) or a time interval (often every 12 months), whichever comes first. Both matter. A car that's done low kilometres but sat for 18 months still needs a service, because fluids and seals deteriorate over time regardless of how much the car has moved. If you're not sure where your car is in its service schedule, a good mechanic can check the logbook and the vehicle's current condition and advise you from there. What to Expect at Fischer Automotive At Fischer Automotive in Bundaberg, logbook servicing is one of the most common jobs we do. We follow the manufacturer's schedule for your specific vehicle, use quality fluids and parts that meet the required specifications, and document everything properly in your logbook. Your warranty stays valid, your service history stays clean, and you're not paying dealership prices to get it done. We service all makes and models, including cars, SUVs, 4WDs, and light trucks, and we're straightforward about what's needed and what it'll cost before we start. If we spot something during the service that needs attention, we'll tell you clearly and let you make the call. Give us a ring to book your next logbook service, or drop into our workshop on Enterprise Street.








