Over £10,000 to replace one rear axle
Over £10,000 to replace one rear axle — unauthorised work, unitemised labour, and a company that may be unable to pay you back.
I took my Toyota Land Cruiser to Surrey Off-Road Specialists for a clearly defined job: replace the rear axle, fit the necessary parts, check the diff, and apply localised rust protection above the axle. That is all I authorised.
What I received instead was three invoices totalling £10,077.12. The first (£3,939.12) was itemised. The second (£3,720) simply listed "Labour £3,000" with no breakdown whatsoever of what those hours were for. The third (£2,418), which I never saw coming, was loaded with work I never requested or approved: sandblasting, powder-coating, priming, painting, underseal and stonechip across large areas of the underbody. None of it was quoted in advance.
The labour is the heart of the problem. They charge £100 an hour and ran up the hours accordingly. To replace a set of suspension pipes they quoted "at least two days", roughly £1,600 in labour. I had that identical job done afterwards by an independent specialist in 2.5 hours for £306 all-in.
And even after they applied a 50% "discount" to the final invoice's labour, the total across the three bills still came to over £10,000, close to double what an independent assessment said the work should reasonably have cost.
To get my vehicle back, I paid the disputed invoices under protest, in writing, with no admission of liability.
The single most important warning for anyone considering this garage: I asked my legal-expenses insurer to pursue a refund. Their solicitors reviewed the case, accepted it had merit, and still declined to fund it - for one reason. Surrey Off-Road Specialists' own filed accounts show net assets of roughly minus £116,600, and a credit check returned a recommended credit limit of just £500. In plain terms: even with a winning judgment, this company appears financially unable to pay anything back.
Get every line item quoted and authorised in writing before any work begins - and ask yourself whether you'd ever see your money again if something went wrong.








