The jet-ski and scooter damage scam is one of the most notorious in travel. A rental operator hands you a jet-ski or motorbike that already has hidden scratches and cracks, then — when you return it — "discovers" the damage and demands a huge sum to cover it, often with intimidation and, for scooters, your passport held hostage. The defense is a phone and two minutes: photograph and video the whole vehicle, in front of the operator, before and after you ride.
How the Jet-Ski & Scooter Damage Scam Works
The rental is quick and friendly, with little or no inspection — that's deliberate, because the craft already carries damage you're not shown. You enjoy the ride and bring it back, and that's when the operator's tone changes: they point to scratches on the hull, a cracked panel, or damage "underneath," and demand a large sum on the spot, sometimes hundreds or thousands. A second person may appear to apply pressure, and because scooter rentals often take your passport as a deposit, you can feel trapped into paying to get it back. The damage was there before you ever touched it.
Where You'll Encounter It
At beach and island rental stands:
- Phuket and Pattaya: the jet-ski version is internationally infamous and has been flagged by the U.S. Embassy.
- Bali and Southeast Asia: the scooter and motorbike version — including passport-as-deposit and "damage" claims — is widespread.
The Red Flags
- The operator rushes or skips a proper pre-rental inspection.
- You're asked to leave your passport as the deposit.
- The jet-ski or scooter already has visible scratches and wear.
- An aggressive change of tone, and a second person, when you return it.
How to Avoid It
Rent only from a reputable operator your hotel recommends, not a beach tout. Before you ride, slowly photograph and video the entire vehicle — every panel, and underneath — in front of the operator, and do the same when you return it; this single habit defeats the scam, because the "damage" was already there in your footage. Never hand over your passport as a deposit; offer a cash deposit or a photocopy instead, and walk away from anyone who insists on the original. Agree the terms clearly before you pay.
What to Do if You're Targeted
Don't be intimidated into paying on the spot. Calmly show your before-and-after photos and video, and if the operator persists, call the Tourist Police (in Thailand, the English-speaking hotline is 1155) — their involvement usually ends it. If you're forced to pay, or your passport is being withheld, contact the police and your embassy, and dispute any card charge with your bank. A travel insurance policy taken out before your trip may help you recover a forced payment or cover injury and equipment costs — check what your policy includes. Our guide on what to do after a scam covers the rest.
See the full destination guides for every scam you'll meet on the ground, area by area.
Tourist scams in Phuket →Frequently Asked Questions
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