Full-Service Tiered Oil Change
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Full-Service Tiered Oil Change Receipt Example
This receipt shows the tiered-pricing format used at drive-through quick-lube centers where the customer stays in the vehicle throughout the service. A prominent oil disclosure line confirms the exact viscosity grade used (0W-20 Full Synthetic). The complimentary tire pressure check and the wiper blade upsell reflect the two-point in-lane service conversation that defines the drive-through chain experience: each interaction lands on the receipt.
This Valvoline Instant Oil Change-style receipt documents the Premium Conventional service for a 2017 Ford Escape at 78,000 miles, including 5 quarts Valvoline 5W-20 ($59.99), filter, 18-point vehicle inspection, fluid top-offs, and windshield wash, totaling $69.59 with 8% tax.
Receipt Breakdown
What Makes This Receipt Realistic
- • Oil disclosure line at $0.00, confirms exact viscosity grade used per state requirement
- • Tire pressure check at $0.00, complimentary but visible, not absent from the receipt
- • Wiper blade replacement as a billed upsell with part description (pair) noted
- • Lower base price ($44.99) versus signature-service ($54.99) reflects different chain tier
- • Disposal fee at chain-volume rate ($2.99), lower than independent shop rate ($3.50)
- • Center number in footer and SERVICE ADVISOR name, chain format identifiers
Frequently Asked Questions
What items appear on this full-service drive-through receipt?
This receipt shows five lines: FULL SERVICE OIL CHANGE at $44.99, FULL SYNTHETIC UPGRADE at $24.99, OIL DISCLOSURE: 0W-20 FULL SYNTHETIC at $0.00, TIRE PRESSURE CHECK at $0.00 (complimentary), WIPER BLADE REPLACEMENT (PR) at $19.99, and DISPOSAL FEE at $2.99. Subtotal is $92.96 with 7% tax of $6.51, total $99.47.
What is the oil disclosure line on a drive-through receipt?
Several states require quick-lube operators to print the exact oil viscosity grade and type used in the service, even when the customer ordered a named package. The OIL DISCLOSURE line (e.g., OIL: 0W-20 FULL SYNTHETIC) confirms the specification, protects the shop from claims that the wrong oil was used, and gives the customer documentation needed to verify manufacturer warranty requirements were met.
Why is the synthetic upgrade more expensive here ($24.99) than the signature-service example ($12.00)?
The two receipts reflect different base-tier pricing structures. The signature-service package starts at $54.99 and uses a higher-grade base oil, so the synthetic upgrade gap is smaller ($12.00). This full-service receipt starts at $44.99 with a conventional-oil base, creating a larger synthetic premium ($24.99). Both structures are common across quick-lube chains: the upgrade price depends entirely on what oil the base package includes.