Erie County, Pennsylvania
All providers are verified and meet Pennsylvania licensing requirements
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Building permits are issued by Erie County or the City of Erie Building Department. Most projects over $500 require a permit.
Modern cars are split between "anyone with basic tools" service items and "computer-controlled, manufacturer-specific" repairs. The era of full DIY car maintenance is past, but everyday items still pay off doing yourself.
Before you start: Cars are heavy. Most DIY car-repair fatalities come from improper jacks (no jack stands), unstable vehicles, or working under a car held only by a hydraulic jack. Modern airbag systems, hybrid/EV batteries, and high-pressure fuel systems add unique safety risks.
Routine maintenance any owner can handle with $50 of tools.
Doable with a service manual and patience.
Specialized tools, safety, or warranty requirements.
Get a free quote from a vetted towing & roadside assistance contractor in Erie. Most respond within hours.
For oil changes, filters, and brake pads — yes. Each oil change saves $40-60 over a shop visit. Beyond those, modern cars increasingly require dealer-level diagnostic tools.
In Erie, basic local tow $75-$150. After-hours, weekends, or longer distances push to $200-$400. AAA membership or insurance roadside add-on is usually $50-$100/year and covers 4-6 tows. The math favors coverage.
Depends on car age. A 2-year-old car under warranty: probably nothing for an oil change but potentially everything for a transmission flush. A 6-year-old out of warranty: irrelevant.
Strongly discouraged. Unprotected tow-strapping a modern car can damage bumper, frame, or drivetrain — easily costing more than the tow saved. Flat tires you can change; everything else, call a tow.
Look for ASE certification, BBB rating, willingness to show the old part being replaced. Get a second opinion for any repair over $500. PA's State Inspection program separates inspecting and repairing — useful for finding shops not motivated to find problems.