Speed Overtakes Car Rental Industry Practices
Technology, data, and digital advances are combining to create a business climate full of information, impatience, and instant results.

Going forward, rental car operations will depend on the speed, precision, accuracy, and flexibility enabled by AI and data.
Credit: Martin Romjue / Auto Rental News
- Technology integration is transforming business practices within the car rental industry.
- Increased access to data is fostering a demand for rapid and informed decision-making.
- Digital advancements are driving a shift towards speed and immediate service in customer interactions.
*Summarized by AI
A last-minute, first-time exhibitor at the 2025 International Car Rental Show in April exemplified the new dynamics transforming car rental operations.
Orcar, an AI-focused car rental system, registered just days before the event. The team traveled from South Korea to demonstrate their technology and illustrate how their service removes rental counters, wait times, paperwork, and price uncertainty.
After the show, they deployed their system at Jeju International Airport near Seoul, as well as in Seoul and Busan, with plans for global expansion.
I share this story because, in 2025, AI and emerging technologies became central to the rental car industry. As detailed in our Fact Book, these developments enable more responsive rental rates, improved bookings, digital customer service, and real-time metrics that help operators better target business.
Going forward, rental car operations will depend on the speed, precision, accuracy, and flexibility enabled by AI and data.
Innovators like Orcar, who move quickly, will shape the future of the car rental industry.
In fact, as I write this, Car Trawler, a B2B mobility technology provider, has released the results of a survey of U.S. travelers. It found that among those who used AI for car rentals, 67% were satisfied. They cited improved price-comparison capabilities and a simpler rental-car selection process as key benefits.
The ascendance of AI and advancing technology comes as we mark our 30th anniversary for the International Car Rental Show, May 13-15, 2026, at the Gaylord Texan near Dallas. It’s our first foray out of Las Vegas.
In addition to an opening night gala, we’re looking to call out some “long-timers” who’ve been attending ICRS for the last three decades, maybe even the first one. (We’ll be sure to tell everyone you started attending at age 10).
A Tech-Driven Industry Agenda
Now with 30 years on the books, ICRS's challenge is to remain relevant and forward-thinking for the next year, two, three, and beyond. As the industry transforms at a faster pace, so must the show.
Our agenda for ICRS 2026 will center on the overriding topics and themes of 2025 to date:
AI and how to monetize car rental damage: We’ll address the media uproar of the year with angry car renters facing damage costs from AI-detected dings, scratches, and abrasions that may have escaped duller digital and human eyes. How should this factor into the customer relationship?
Real-time rates: As we see in this year’s Fact Book, immense data can now adjust pricing in real time based on supply and demand flow. How do car rental companies maximize these opportunities as AI gets smarter and faster?
OTA and online bookings: The Millennials and Gen Zers are having none of it: Counters, lines, phone calls, reservation windows, and even large parking lots. What are ways to connect rental cars with arriving car renters at airports, especially younger travelers? How can rental cars better compete on tech-driven convenience?
I can already tell we’ll generate plenty of topics and ideas for ICRS sessions. Send me your insights as well.
Welcoming A New Generation Of Car Rental Operators
Finally, celebrating the past cannot happen without a focus on the industry’s potential ahead. We would like to welcome and recognize more young entrepreneurs entering the industry.
I met Nathaniel Fuentes two months ago at the American Car Rental Association’s annual conference. Nathaniel, 25, runs Daily Frequency Rentals, a Cleveland, Ohio-based company he started in 2023. He buys used cars and rents them out. At his first ACRA event, I observed him speaking with a successful veteran rental car operator, who gave him wise advice.
Nathaniel has grown the company’s revenue from $140,000 in the first year to $1.2 million this year, running a fleet of 100 rental cars. He’s now aiming for his first 1,000.
“We’ve learned to focus on community, compliance, and smart growth,” he told me. “The revenue and customer loyalty prove that our model works. As long as we keep improving and adapting, I’m confident about where we’re headed.”
And so should we as an industry. If we encourage and support businesspeople like Nathaniel, we can look forward to ICRS events for decades to come.
This column first appeared in the January 2026 print edition of the Auto Rental News Fact Book.
More Blog Posts
ICRS 2026 Countered The AI Drama, Thanks To These Panelists
One of my favorite sessions laid out the AI techno-optimism available to rental car operators ready to adapt their services for the decades ahead.
Read More →Why Is JFK’s Grandson Interested In Your Rental Fleets?
Car rental operations should follow consistent practices when applying AI to vehicle damage assessments.
Read More →‘Zero Friction’ Is The New Buzz Phrase for ICRS
This year’s International Car Rental Show hits the hot buttons on industry change and challenges.
Read More →Rental EV Adoption Requires Local, Targeted Approach
The EV frenzy of the last few years has disillusioned the motoring public about going all-electric. Now it’s time to meet the market where it’s at.
Read More →Why Car Rental Operations Must Use AI To Gain More Renters
A race has started between generations embracing AI and companies willing to adapt it to their operations.
Read More →As Another Year Fades, A Future Industry Vision Crystallizes
Despite the battering of economic forces, the U.S. car rental industry appears fortified against even faster upheaval ahead.
Read More →Meet Jul-IA, The Attentive Agent Moving Into Car Rental Operations
As AI gains knowledge and reach, it’s ready to be promoted from a rental car agent to a back-office manager.
Read More →Finding A Middle Way On AI-Driven Rental Car Fees
The spate of media reports about car renters furious with AI-assessments creates bad will and poor PR images for the car rental industry.
Read More →A Nuanced View on Auto Tariffs, Trade, and Technology
Veteran auto executive Jim Press recently talked with Auto Rental News about how tariffs could reshape the global automotive industry.
Read More →Why Rental Car Fleets Will Be the Real Test of EV Success
Blog Post: When electric vehicles achieve parity of convenience and security with ICE vehicles, then fleets can fully move forward with confidence.
Read More →










