How much does transmission repair cost in Matthews, NC? +
Our published prices: Transmission repair starts at $600 — covers component-level work like solenoid packs, valve bodies, torque converters, fluid service, and leak repairs. Full rebuilds are quoted after diagnostic and typically run 30–50% less than dealership pricing ($3,000–$6,000 at dealers). Complete diagnostic is a flat $150, credited in full toward your repair. Written estimate always free before work begins.
What are the signs of transmission trouble? +
The most common signs: 1. Slipping gears (engine revs but car doesn't accelerate). 2. Red or brown fluid puddle under the car. 3. Delayed engagement from Park to Drive. 4. Rough or hard shifts with clunks or jerks. 5. Burning smell. 6. Whining or grinding noise. 7. Check-engine or transmission warning light. 8. Car stuck in one gear (limp mode). Most issues are far cheaper to fix when caught early — our $150 diagnostic identifies the cause in under 90 minutes.
How long will my car be in the shop? +
Diagnostic: 60–90 minutes, same-day. Fluid service: 2–3 hours, same-day. Solenoid pack, sensor, mount, or leak repair: 1–2 days. Valve body repair: 1–2 days. Torque converter: 2–3 days. Full rebuild: 3–5 days. We provide an exact written timeline before work starts — and we tell you immediately if specialty parts will add a day to the schedule.
Repair, rebuild, or replace — which do I need? +
Depends entirely on what's wrong. Many slipping or rough-shift issues are caused by a single failed component (solenoid pack, valve body, sensor) and can be repaired for $600–$1,200. A full rebuild is needed when internal clutch packs or gear sets are damaged — typically $2,000–$3,500 at our shop vs. $3,000–$6,000 at dealers. A complete replacement is rare and usually only makes sense on totaled internal damage. Our $150 diagnostic tells you which category you're in — and any shop that pushes you straight to a rebuild without diagnostic work is overselling.
Do you work on automatic, manual, and CVT transmissions? +
Yes. Automatic — including ZF 8HP (BMW, Audi, Range Rover), GM 8L90/6L80, Ford 10R80/6R80, Aisin units. Manual — 5-speed, 6-speed, dual-clutch DSG/DCT/PDK (VW, Audi, Porsche, BMW). CVT — Toyota, Honda, Nissan, Subaru. Every make, domestic and foreign. Our techs have 15+ years on European and luxury transmissions specifically.
How often should I service my transmission fluid? +
Automatic transmissions: every 30,000–60,000 miles. Manual transmissions: 60,000–100,000 miles. CVTs: every 30,000–50,000 miles (more frequent because CVT fluid runs hotter). Skipping fluid service is the #1 cause of premature transmission failure — a $600 fluid service is much cheaper than a $3,000 rebuild down the road.
Is it safe to drive with transmission problems? +
Short answer: no. Driving with slipping gears, fluid leaks, or rough shifts dramatically accelerates internal wear. A $600 solenoid repair caught early can turn into a $3,000+ rebuild if you keep driving on it for weeks. If you see red or brown fluid under your car, smell a burning odor, or feel slipping — get it diagnosed within a few days. If the burning smell is strong or you see smoke, stop driving immediately and have it towed.
Do you offer a warranty on transmission repairs? +
Yes. 24-month / 24,000-mile warranty on all parts and labor for component repairs. Full rebuilds carry an extended 36-month / 36,000-mile warranty on the rebuilt unit. If anything we touched fails inside that window, we fix it free — no questions, no fine print. We give you a printed warranty card at pickup.
Can you fix the transmission the same day? +
Some jobs — yes. Fluid service, mount replacement, sensor fixes, and minor electrical work are typically completed same-day if dropped off before 11 AM. Most transmission repairs take 1–3 days — that's the realistic turnaround for solenoid packs, valve bodies, torque converters, and seal work. Full rebuilds take 3–5 days. We'll tell you exactly which timeline applies to your car before you commit, not after.
Why are dealership transmission prices so much higher? +
Three reasons: 1. Labor rate. Dealerships bill $180–$220/hr in the Charlotte metro. We charge less. 2. Parts markup. Dealers mark up OEM parts 40–60% over wholesale. We buy at fleet wholesale and pass the savings. 3. They quote full replacements when repairs would do. Dealers profit more on a $5,000 new transmission than a $600 solenoid fix — and they often default to the bigger ticket. We don't. We tell you what your transmission actually needs.