The biggest selling point of a mobile mechanic is convenience and the no-drama solution for getting your car fixed, no matter where you are. An Indianapolis, Indiana-area mechanic apparently never got that memo. The post from recently stranded motorist Michelle York (@michelleyork56) details her interaction with a mobile mechanic she solicited via Facebook to fix an undisclosed problem with her car from the road. But before he’d make the trip, he told her she’d need to pay a deposit and give him some gas money. That extra requirement didn’t sit well with York. "Baby, you ain't no mobile mechanic if you not mobile. If you need some gas, you stranded just the [expletive] like me," she says in a TikTok about the interaction. Should You Pay A Deposit To A Mobile Mechanic? What caught York off guard wasn't just the one message, but how quickly the responses to her outreach started to follow the same pattern. After putting the request out on Facebook, she said her inbox filled with people offering to help, but the conversation moved on pretty quickly from diagnostics or availability. Instead, it shifted almost immediately to what it would take for them to get on the road and head her way. "We in the same [expletive] situation," she says, framing the exchange less as a negotiation than something bordering on extortion or being taken advantage of. From her perspective, the whole point of reaching out to someone who advertises mobile mechanic service is that they're already equipped and ready to get to you. Once that assumption breaks down, so does the value and appeal of the entire mobile mechanic enterprise. Tell us what you think! View Comments Put simply, a stay-put-but-pay-first mechanic offers nothing to someone in her situation. "Nobody is just passing money to a [expletive] stranger they don't even know just to drive to they house," York says, as a kind of closing statement on the matter. York’s viewpoint resonated with viewers. People didn't just weigh in on the situation itself but also shared their own experiences navigating repair costs. In their view, the tension among price, convenience, and trust isn't limited to a single roadside interaction. Others used the opportunity to share their own frustrations with repair work, including how unpredictable pricing can be "Mine quoted $1,200 for brakes and rotors...boy bye," one commenter wrote. That number drew immediate pushback and comparisons from others who said they'd seen very different quotes for similar work. "That's how much the shop is," another viewer replied. "My shop by me said 500, and another one said 800," a third one added. Who Can You Trust? The back-and-forth didn't directly address the question of paying ahead of time, but it underscored the same basic issue York was reacting to: figuring out who to trust and what a fair deal actually looks like can be almost as frustrating as having car trouble. In situations like this, the gap often comes down to perspective. For someone offering on-the-go service, time and travel aren't free. A long drive for a job that may or may not happen carries real cost, especially when there's no guarantee the customer will follow through. Given that reality, asking for something up front can help filter out no-shows or cover the basics before committing to the trip. But from the customer's viewpoint, that same request can land very differently. Without a storefront, a known business name, or any built-in accountability, the interaction begins with uncertainty. Sending money before anyone arrives, even a small amount, can feel like an unreasonable gamble for someone who's already in a pretty tough spot. That trust gap is what caused York to draw a hard line. To her, the appeal of calling a mobile mechanic isn't just convenience, but also the expectation that the person on the other end is ready to move without needing help or extra motivation to get there. When the other person doesn't share the same values, it's easy to see why she decided to keep looking. Motor1 reached out to York via direct message and comment on the clip. We’ll update this if she responds. We want your opinion! What would you like to see on Motor1.com? Take our 3 minute survey. - The Motor1.com Team