Lights.com—Tail Lights

The tail lights on your car can seem unimportant right up until the moment when you bust one. Suddenly you can't signal, cars have trouble telling when you're breaking and you are in constant jeopardy of being pulled over and cited for a violation. It is precisely this crunch of anxiety-producing elements that the big automakers count on when they choose the price for replacement tail lights.

Sometimes getting your car fixed is a matter of choice, other times of frugality--but sometimes it is quite simply the law. When you have no wiggle room in the matter, you'd better believe it's a seller's market, and the revenues continue to look good year after year. Thankfully the entire replacement auto parts business has been turned on its head in the last couple of years and we have more choices than we used to.

Don't Break for Tail Lights
When inequities such as these come up in the business world, it is only a matter of time before a clever entrepreneur fills the gap. In this case the gap is the one between manufacturers and consumers, and it has until recently been filled only by an ever-widening array of resellers content to take a nominal fee for the privilege of passing auto parts along. Not anymore.

You can get most anything online, and these days that means tail lights, steering wheels and anything else--new. If you want a better way to maintain your car without paying what amounts to a compound surcharge, the best thing to do is work with a vetted online vendor whose customer service has earned high marks from other drivers. Get it right and you could find yourself spending the hundreds you save on those neon running lights you've been eyeing.