In Mexico it's called "original de agencia." In Colombia and Argentina, "repuesto original." In Chile, "pieza de concesionario." The name changes, but the problem is the same across LATAM: the customer asks for the lowest price without understanding what they're actually buying — and you lose margin trying to compete against something that isn't even comparable.
This article gives you the framework to explain the difference, recommend with criteria, and close more sales without needing to drop your price.
The Quality Map: It's Not Two Options, It's Four
The most common mistake is presenting it as "original = good, generic = bad." The reality has more layers:
Made by the same supplier that equips the vehicle on the factory assembly line
Same part number, same specification as what the vehicle came with from the factory. In LATAM: Toyota original, GM original, Volkswagen original. Higher price, manufacturer warranty, zero compatibility risk. This is what dealerships sell.
Recognized brands that meet or exceed OEM specifications
Bosch, Denso, Monroe, Gabriel, NGK, Brembo. Made with the same materials and tolerances as OEM — sometimes by the same supplier with different packaging. Price is 15–30% lower than original, equivalent performance. This is what professional shops in Colombia, Argentina, and Chile choose for out-of-warranty vehicles.
Unknown manufacturer, no verifiable OEM number, no real warranty
May work, may fail within weeks. No traceability. High return rate. The apparent margin disappears with the first complaint. Only appropriate when the customer understands and explicitly accepts the trade-off.
Most auto parts stores carry all three — the problem is not explaining to the customer which is which.
When to Recommend Each Level
Vehicle under warranty · Safety-critical parts (brakes, steering, airbags) · Customer requires OEM on the invoice · Repair shop guarantees labor with OEM parts · Newer vehicle with high resale value
Vehicle out of warranty · Customer wants quality without the dealer price · Regular maintenance parts (filters, shocks, brake pads, spark plugs) · Fleet with a defined budget · Professional workshop buying in volume
Low commercial-value vehicle · Temporary repair before selling the car · Non-critical part with limited use · Only when the customer explicitly accepts the quality trade-off
How to Explain It to the Customer in 30 Seconds
These are the scripts that work — tested in auto parts stores across Mexico, Colombia, Argentina, Chile, and Peru:
The Mistake That Costs the Most: Not Offering Two Options
When you only offer one price, the customer compares that price against what they found elsewhere. When you offer two options (premium + OEM, or economy + premium), the customer compares your options against each other — and you control the conversation.
This is the "price contrast" technique: the brain doesn't evaluate prices in absolute terms, it evaluates them in relation to other prices. A shock absorber at $85 USD seems expensive on its own. Next to one at $110 OEM, it looks like the smart choice.
Repair shops throughout Colombia, Argentina, and Chile have adopted this approach: always presenting two options, explaining the difference, and letting the customer decide. The result is fewer returns, more repeat customers, and a higher average ticket.
The Language Varies by Country — Know Your Market
The same concept has different names depending on where your customer is:
| Country | OEM is called | Parts store is called |
|---|---|---|
| Mexico | Original de agencia / Original | Refaccionaria |
| Colombia | Repuesto original / De concesionario | Distribuidora de autopartes |
| Argentina | Repuesto original / De concesionaria | Distribuidora de repuestos |
| Chile | Pieza de concesionario | Distribuidora de repuestos |
| Peru | Repuesto original | Distribuidora de autopartes |
Why Returns Are a Quoting Problem, Not a Parts Problem
Most returns happen when the customer expected OEM quality but received economy quality — or vice versa — without anyone clarifying the difference. When you explain the three tiers upfront, the customer knows what they're getting. A well-informed customer who makes the right choice rarely returns the part.
This is also why digital quoting tools that send a breakdown by quality level — not just a single price — dramatically reduce return rates. The customer sees the options, chooses, and doesn't come back complaining that it wasn't what they expected.
Victoria quotes with the right quality tier automatically
When a customer requests a part via WhatsApp, Victoria identifies the customer's profile, verifies the three available options in your catalog, and sends the quote with the quality breakdown — without your team having to explain it every single time.
See how it works →