Wiper Blade Replacement in the area around Quincy, FL averages $22.00, with prices ranging from $10.00 to $29.99 based on 10 verified prices from 10 nearby shops.
Showing nearby shops within 25 mi of Quincy · June 2026
Wiper Blade Replacement prices in Quincy, FL range from $10.00 to $29.99 at local auto repair shops, based on verified pricing data gathered from 10 shops across the area. Windshield wiper blades use a rubber squeegee bonded to a metal or plastic frame to clear water from the windshield with each pass. Prices for this service in Quincy vary by vehicle make and model, the grade of parts and fluids used, and whether you book with an independent shop, a franchise chain, or a dealership. Independent and chain repair shops in Quincy typically charge 20 to 40 percent less than dealerships for this service; dealerships may justify the premium for warranty-covered work or brand-specific diagnostics. All prices listed on this page were verified directly from shop websites or user-submitted receipts, and each carries a Last Verified date. For details on how PriceMyFix verifies prices, visit pricemyfix.com/about/methodology.
| Shop | Type | Price | Details | Verified | Distance | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chevrolet GMC of Quincy2039 West Jefferson Street | Dealership | $25.00Above avg | Last verified 35 days agoby PriceMyFix | 1.4 mi | View Shop | |
| Ultimate Image Auto1177 Capital Circle Southeast | Dealership | $19.95Coupon | Per blade. Most vehicles. | Verified 2 weeks agoby PriceMyFix | 23.8 mi | View Shop |
| Premier Auto & Car Center38 Rainbow Drive | Dealership | $19.99Coupon | Verified 12 days agoby PriceMyFix | 29.7 mi | View Shop |
The average wiper blade replacement in Quincy, FL costs $21.65 across 3 shops. The cheapest verified price is $19.95 at Ultimate Image Auto.
Trucks and SUVs with higher oil capacity may cost more. Check individual shop listings for vehicle-specific pricing.
Windshield wiper blades use a rubber squeegee bonded to a metal or plastic frame to clear water from the windshield with each pass. The rubber element degrades from UV exposure, ozone, heat cycling, and abrasion against the glass. When the rubber stiffens or splits, it leaves streaks, skips, or chatter rather than clearing cleanly. Modern beam-style blades (without the metal frame) have better contact pressure in the center of the blade and handle ice buildup better than traditional bracket-style blades. Replacement is straightforward and requires no tools on most vehicles.
Replace when: (1) you notice streaking, smearing, or skipping during use, (2) blades chatter across the windshield (indicates hardened or cracked rubber), (3) blades leave a fog or film after wiping, (4) you hear squeaking even on a wet windshield. Replace proactively every 6 months in the Sun Belt (UV and heat degrade rubber faster) or every 12 months in milder climates. Before any long drive in rain-prone conditions, test your wipers on a wet windshield — a failed wiper in heavy highway rain is genuinely dangerous.
Failed wipers are a direct safety hazard. A blade that streaks or skips in heavy rain reduces forward visibility to near zero at highway speeds. Florida, Georgia, and other Gulf Coast states experience extremely heavy rain events (tropical storms, afternoon convective thunderstorms) where wiper performance is the difference between safe visibility and pulling over. At $15–$40 for a full set and a 5-minute DIY replacement, wiper blades are the highest-impact, lowest-cost safety maintenance item most drivers neglect.
Wipers are a high-margin upsell at shops: (1) be skeptical of shops that insist on their brand at $30–$50 per blade when Bosch, Rain-X, or ANCO beam blades at $15–$20 each perform identically for daily driving, (2) 'specialty' wipers marketed for the rear window at inflated prices — rear wiper blades are usually $8–$15 at any auto parts store, (3) installation fees for wiper blades — if you buy wipers at a shop, installation should be included in the price, (4) dealers that replace only the rubber insert (refill) instead of the full blade assembly — the refill technique works but is obsolete on beam-style blades, and some shops charge close to full-blade prices for insert-only service.
All prices verified from public sources and user submissions. Learn about our verification methodology.