File that under outrageous.
I dropped my car off for an oil change and it needed brakes and rotors. They wanted $650 for rotors and pads on all fours.
I just finished my driver side rotor and pads in 45 minutes with hand tools. The parts where $130 all in. What are these shops thinking?
They want $300 / side for the lower control arms. It's like three bolts!
Yup. The silly thing is that $650 is "only a little" on the pricey side! $500 would be about what I would expect for this work at an independent shop, and $650 at the dealership.
When I was young, my dad gave me some of the best advice I have EVER gotten: "Never pay someone to do something that you can do yourself"! Now that I'm older and have a little more $, it all comes down to how much cursing I'll be doing while doing the work, and how hot it is outside (I live in TX and that is a huge factor to consider down here). So, sometimes I just pay somebody to do such work for me even though I know I can do it cheaper.
One HUGE advantage of doing work yourself is that you are 100% sure that it is done CORRECTLY. I am always nervous when I turn my car over to a mechanic. Same with my lab instrumentation at work, several times I have discovered that I know the equipment better than the "vendor expert"!
I did all 4 rotors and pads and changed out the crappy stock front brake lines on my Mustang to the braided-steel variety recently. I installed slotted/drilled rotors, high quality ceramic pads, and those brake lines all in a day (I admit, I was danged sore for the next couple of days). I bought all of these performance parts off of RockAuto.com for $300 delivered!!! That's about what I would pay for the economy stuff at the local parts house.
If you do ever do brake or hydraulic clutch work, do yourself a favor and get one of those "1-man bleeder pumps". I'll never bleed a system any other way again.