Treat Dad's
Truck Right.
Five gift-able services dads actually appreciate — none of them ties. Plus one shop secret that turns a tired work truck into a parade vehicle. Father's Day lands Sunday June 21 this year. The calendar is closer than it looks.

Dad won't buy this for himself. That's exactly why it's a great gift.
We've watched it for sixty-two years. A truck or a daily driver comes in for a small repair, and somewhere in the conversation the owner says "yeah, that's been bothering me for a while, but I never get around to it." The hazy headlight. The faded trim. The bumper scuff from the trailer hitch incident he doesn't want to talk about. None of it is a real maintenance issue. All of it is the kind of thing a dad would never spend his own money fixing — and the kind of thing he secretly loves when somebody else does.
Here are five services to consider as a Father's Day gift, in order of "noticeable-from-the-driveway" return. Each one is something we book regularly in June for adult kids paying the bill. Each one comes with a clear price range so you can pick what fits. And at the end, we'll share the one thing most shops don't talk about that quietly makes the biggest visual difference.
Headlight Restoration.

California sun is hard on plastic. After five to seven years, the polycarbonate lens on most trucks and cars goes from clear to that familiar foggy yellow-gray haze. Light output drops by as much as 70%. Headlights that look dim are also actually dim — which matters on a dark country road.
What we do: wet-sand the lens through progressively finer grits, polish to clear plastic, then apply a UV-resistant clear coat that re-seals the surface so it doesn't haze again next year. Takes about an hour per pair. The result is dramatic — usually the single most visible cosmetic change you can make on an older truck.
It makes the truck look ten years younger from twenty feet away. And it solves a problem he's been quietly squinting through every night drive for the last two years.
Interior Detail.

A work truck cab collects six things: coffee residue, dog hair, dust from the dash air vents, salt and sand in the carpet, fingerprint smudges on every glossy surface, and that particular smell of a vehicle that lives a working life. None of it is dad's fault. All of it is gone in three hours with the right equipment.
What we do: full vacuum (including under the seats and behind the pedals), carpet shampoo, leather or vinyl reset, dashboard and door wipedown with no-sheen treatment, glass inside and out, vents and air-flow areas, console reset. The smell of a new car comes back. Most owners forgot the smell was even gone.
Climbing into a truck that smells and looks like it did the day he drove it home is one of those small luxuries that hits harder than expected. He won't say much about it. He'll just keep getting in and out of the cab the first day.
Paint Correction & Wax.

If dad's truck is red, dark blue, or black, the paint has been quietly suffering through every Sacramento summer since he bought it. UV oxidation and micro-scratching dull the clear coat in ways a regular car wash can't fix. Paint correction removes those layers of damage and restores the depth. Wax seals it.
What we do: a decontamination wash to remove embedded grit, a clay bar pass to lift what the wash can't, then a single-stage compound and polish to remove oxidation and fine swirl marks, finished with a high-quality wax or paint sealant. The hood becomes a mirror again.
He'll walk around the truck the next morning before work, in the driveway, just looking at the reflections in the panels. We've watched this exact scene happen a hundred times.
The One Scuff Repair.

Every truck has one. The corner scrape from the post he didn't see backing out of the storage unit. The long mark from where the trailer hitch ball met the bumper cover. The white smudge that's actually someone else's paint transferred onto his. It's been on his to-do list for two years. It's quick to fix when you know the color codes.
What we do: sand the affected area down to clean substrate, fill any plastic damage, prime, color-match using our paint code book (same one we use on insurance work), spray, blend into adjacent panels, clear coat, polish. Bumper covers are flexible plastic, so the technique differs from body-panel repair — but the result, done right, is invisible.
Because the next time he glances back at the truck in a parking lot, the one thing he always notices won't be there. Quiet satisfaction. The best kind.
Ceramic Coating.

This is the premium option, and it earns its price. A professionally applied ceramic coating bonds to the clear coat and creates a hydrophobic, UV-resistant, chemical-resistant layer that lasts 2 to 5 years depending on the product and the prep. Water beads off in perfect droplets. Bird droppings don't etch. Bug splatter wipes away. Washes take half the time.
What we do: two full days. Decontamination wash, clay bar, full paint correction (necessary — any imperfection underneath gets locked in by the coating), iron decontamination, ceramic coat application panel-by-panel, controlled cure time, second-layer application on horizontal panels. Pricing scales with vehicle size and condition — free in-person quotes.
Because next time he washes the truck, he'll spend forty-five minutes instead of two hours. And because every time he walks past it in the rain, he'll see beads of water that look like glass marbles. That part doesn't get old.
Trim Restoration.
The thing nothing else fixes.

Here's the part most shops don't lead with: the single biggest reason older trucks look old isn't the paint. It's the trim. The matte black plastic and rubber pieces — bumper covers, fender flares, side moldings, mirror housings, door handles, wiper cowls. Three years of California sun turns them gray and chalky. Nothing else on the truck makes it look as worn out as faded trim does.
The truth: at-home trim restorers from the auto parts store are temporary. They look great for two weeks, then wash off and look greasy in between. Professional trim restoration uses a permanent dye system — proper cleaning with degreaser, then a product that bonds molecularly to the plastic and stays deep black for two to three years. Not oily. Not greasy. Just black again, like it was.
It's the cheapest add-on we offer (usually $40 to $100 depending on how much trim there is), and it's consistently the change customers point at first. A truck with restored trim looks measurably newer than an identical truck without it. If you're giving dad anything else on this list, add trim restoration. It'll be the part he keeps mentioning.
Father's Day is sooner than you think.
June 21 is Sunday. We block out Father's Day appointments fast — call early in the week to lock in a slot before then, or right after if Dad is around for the weekend. Mix and match any of the services above. We'll put together a written estimate before we start so there are no surprises.
Book Dad's Detail or call (916) 372-5353Also worth knowing: Services 01, 03, 04, plus interior detail, are bundled in our Summer Send-Off Bundle at $549 — about $210 off à la carte if you want the whole stack at once.
More from June.
- Jun 9
Sending Them Off Safely: A Pre-College Car Checklist
Read June 9 → - Jun 16 · You are here
This Father's Day, Treat Dad's Truck Right
- Jun 23 · Up next
What Sacramento Summer Heat Does to Your Paint
Read June 23 → - Jun 30
The 20-Minute Pre-Departure Walkaround
Read June 30 →
Quick answers, in one sentence each.
What's a good Father's Day car gift for Sacramento dads?
The most popular Father's Day gift booked at Rippers in June is a half-day detail package: headlight restoration, interior detail, exterior wash and wax, plus one specific cosmetic fix (a bumper scuff, a paint chip, or trim restoration). Total ranges $300 to $600 depending on services, and most dads never spend on these items for themselves.
How much does headlight restoration cost in Sacramento?
Most Sacramento-area body shops price headlight restoration between $80 and $150 per pair, including a UV-resistant clear coat to slow re-hazing. The process takes about an hour and produces a dramatic visible improvement — typically the single most noticeable cosmetic change available on an older vehicle.
What's the difference between waxing and ceramic coating?
Wax is a temporary sacrificial layer that lasts 1 to 3 months and provides modest UV protection and shine. Ceramic coating is a chemical bond to the clear coat that lasts 2 to 5 years, provides significantly stronger UV, chemical, and water-spot protection, and creates a hydrophobic surface. Ceramic costs more upfront but is far more durable over time.
Can I give a car detail as a gift in Sacramento?
Yes — most Sacramento body shops, including Rippers, offer gift certificates that can be purchased in person or by phone for any service combination. Common Father's Day combinations include headlight restoration plus interior detail, or full exterior detail plus a specific cosmetic fix. We'll provide a printable gift certificate if you call ahead.
How long does a full Father's Day detail take?
A standard exterior plus interior detail typically takes 3 to 4 hours; adding paint correction extends it to a full day; adding ceramic coating takes 2 days. We schedule Father's Day appointments throughout the week leading up to and following the holiday — booking by Wednesday of the week prior is usually sufficient to secure a slot.
CA BAR Automotive Repair Dealer Reg. [ARD #294466]
Pricing ranges reflect typical Sacramento-market rates and are subject to change based on vehicle size, condition, and prep work required. Final pricing confirmed at a free in-person estimate. All services are customer-pay only and are not for insurance-billed repairs. See the rest of The Send-Off Issue and our June 2026 newsletter for more.



