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Auto Repair Leads — Scrape Google Maps for Auto Repair Shops

This page turns a single Google Maps search into a clean CSV of auto repair shops in any city. Run a search like "auto repair in Houston" or "mechanic in Nashville" and every matching shop comes back as one row — name, full address, phone, website, category, star rating, and review count — with a flag on the ones that have no website at all. No code, no Places API: fill in the search, watch it collect live, and download the file.

It works for two audiences. Agencies, web designers, and local marketers who sell to independent shops get a pre-qualified prospect list — the no-website flag points at highly rated mechanics who are losing the trust battle online, plus the phone number to pitch them. Shop owners use it to scout the competition: pull every repair shop, mechanic, and specialty garage nearby, sort by rating, and see who is dominating local search and who never built a site.

What's in every row

Each shop lands as its own row with consistent columns, so a metro full of garages becomes a list you can qualify at a glance.

Business name & category

The shop name and Google's label — auto repair shop, mechanic, or a specialty like brakes or transmission.

Full address

Street, city, state, and zip, ready for territory planning or a mailed offer.

Phone number

The listing's public number — the outreach channel for shops that answer the phone between jobs.

Website, or the no-website flag

The site URL when there is one, and a clear flag on the shops with none — the prospects worth pitching first.

Rating & review count

Stars and review volume — the exact signals car owners use, so a 4.8-star shop with no site stands out immediately.

How to turn it into clients

Auto repair is a trust purchase. Drivers are afraid of being overcharged, so they lean hard on reviews and a shop that looks legitimate before they hand over the keys. A mechanic with a 4.8 rating and no website is losing that vote to a chain with a slick page. Build a demo that puts their reviews front and center, lists their services and specialties — brakes, transmissions, diagnostics, fleet work — and adds an appointment or quote-request form, then pitch it with the link already live.

Unlike a plumber, the customer drives to the shop, which makes showing up in "mechanic near me" and looking credible even more decisive. Sell the build flat with a monthly for hosting, and point to the appointment form as the thing that converts a nervous searcher into a booked bay — then offer a Google Business tune-up alongside it to feed the shop more of that local search.

Filter to the best-fit prospects

Sort by rating and review count and start at the top: a shop with strong reviews and no website has earned its reputation and just cannot show it to a searcher — your easiest pitch. Skip zero-review listings that may be closed, and for a sharper list, filter to the specialty categories (transmission, collision, fleet) where a credible site is worth the most.

How it works

1

Search your city

"auto repair in Houston", "mechanic in Nashville", "transmission shop in Phoenix" — or sweep the category city-wide.

2

Set your cap

Choose how many shops to pull. The run holds only its worst-case cost, never more than your balance.

3

Watch it run live

Shops stream in with a live counter — flip on the no-website filter first to keep only prospects.

4

Download your CSV

Billed per place scraped, the unused hold refunded, and the file opens straight in Excel or Google Sheets.

Frequently asked questions

Can I get auto repair shops without a website?

Yes. Every row flags whether the shop has a website, and a filter can keep only the ones with none — the pre-qualified list for web-design and marketing outreach. Name, phone, address, rating, and reviews come with each shop, so you can call the highest-rated first.

How current is the data?

It is as current as Google Maps itself. Each run pulls live listings the moment you start it, so phone numbers, ratings, and review counts reflect what is on Google that day — not an aging list that has been resold for months.

How much does it cost?

Runs are $8 per 1,000 results, and every new account starts with $5.00 in free credits — enough to pull every repair shop in a metro before you pay anything. You are billed per result scraped, never for your cap, failed runs are refunded in full, and contact columns are included at no extra cost.

Related

Pull every no-website auto shop in your city

$5.00 free to start · phone & address on every row · billed per place scraped.

Start a scrape