Fri-13-06-2014, 10:44 AM
Ever wondered how to hire a car in Montmorillon? No, neither have I until our banger was taken off the road for remedial repairs etc.
Any road up....it's surprisingly simple.
Walk into LeClerc. Go into the travel agency bit and ask for a car/tipper truck/van or whatever it is you need.
You will need to have with you:
A couple of utlity bills with your name and address.
Your driving licence. Before you ask, they are quite happy to accept a UK licence.
Cheque book/credit card.
Once you've sorted out your vehicle of choice, they will take a whacking great deposit - anything between €800 and €1,000. This deposit is "unreal" in the sense that they don't cash the cheque or actually activate the credit car for payment.
Next, you take all your paperwork - and there's plenty of it - to the overworked girl in the petrol station kiosk. In the 15 minutes it'll take before she gets around to you, have a good look around the car for lumps, bumps, scrapes and anything else Le Clerc may not have noted on the form. You already have the form in your paperwork, in case you wondered.
She'll then take a cursory look round the car, you both agree on the mileage reading and off you go.
Our Davia Sandero cost €5 a day plus 12 centimes per kilometre. Nice car but with a nasty, sloppy Renault gearbox but that's a rant for somewhere else.
TIP: Don't go into LeClerc and ask for a car for that same day. The answer was a resounding: "Non." We are in France after all....
Any road up....it's surprisingly simple.
Walk into LeClerc. Go into the travel agency bit and ask for a car/tipper truck/van or whatever it is you need.
You will need to have with you:
A couple of utlity bills with your name and address.
Your driving licence. Before you ask, they are quite happy to accept a UK licence.
Cheque book/credit card.
Once you've sorted out your vehicle of choice, they will take a whacking great deposit - anything between €800 and €1,000. This deposit is "unreal" in the sense that they don't cash the cheque or actually activate the credit car for payment.
Next, you take all your paperwork - and there's plenty of it - to the overworked girl in the petrol station kiosk. In the 15 minutes it'll take before she gets around to you, have a good look around the car for lumps, bumps, scrapes and anything else Le Clerc may not have noted on the form. You already have the form in your paperwork, in case you wondered.
She'll then take a cursory look round the car, you both agree on the mileage reading and off you go.
Our Davia Sandero cost €5 a day plus 12 centimes per kilometre. Nice car but with a nasty, sloppy Renault gearbox but that's a rant for somewhere else.
TIP: Don't go into LeClerc and ask for a car for that same day. The answer was a resounding: "Non." We are in France after all....