Did you recently take on (or consider) a loan of 84 months or longer on a car purchase?
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A reporter would like to speak with you about your experience; please reach out to PR@Edmunds.com by 7/22 for details.
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Advertising Fees
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Comments
CWJ
It is as much a part of the (invoice) cost of the car as the transportation cost is.
Ed
I think some of the confusion over the fairness of ad fees come from two sources:
1) Internet sites like carbuyingtips.com which say NEVER to pay ad fees of any kind, and anyone that does so is being seriously ripped off.
2) Bad experiences with sleazeball dealerships that tack on the ad fees as an ADDITION to the negotiated price. Under this scenario, the consumer is surprised by this fee while in the F&I office. Because of this, many will assume that all ad fee charges are dealership scams, just like rust proofing and VIN etching.
Basically, they exist. And I know carbuyingtips.com probably says they are bogus (If they are, how come theyre on SC430 and Thunderbird invoices?
Although I put very little stock in that website for a number of reasons. Biggest of which is that the writer of it didnt get a very good deal on either of the cars he bought!
They should NEVER be added after the fact. If youre working invoice up and see them and they look legit, fine. Work from there.
But if the dealer tries to add them on after you strike a deal.. something is probably up.
Bill
CWJ
Car_man
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If you are going to give numbers on invoices it would be better to be accurate.
Dealer co-op advertising $364
Local advertising and marketing $364
Incidently, this is on a 2002 Envoy in Florida...has anyone ever heard of this before?
CWJ
Is it in the same typeface on the invoice?
Bill
Bill was nice enough to show a couple of invoices, a few weeks ago -- I just don't remember what subject ..... Bill ...?
Terry.
I dunno, if its preprinted.. doubt theyd mess with it, whatcha think?
Bill
The confusion over them has always caused agita...
Bill
If there is an "extension" of some of the programs
-- like there just was, for 0% from Nov to Jan, a lot of the "old" inventory ( on the ground in Aug/Sept/Oct, etc. ) -- might not show on the invoices -- instead, the dealer get's "charged off" his quarterly holdback ...and/ or depending on how he/she has set up their floor plan and such ....
Agita ...? ... isn't that the stuff you get between your toes ..? -- l.o.l...
Terry.
CWJ
Hell, perhaps even charge a fee to cover the cost for the Cable TV in the service lounge...
Edmunds says from less than 1 percent to as high as 3 percent.
Their both right.
Look at the invoice or go to Carsdirect.com for the accurate invoice.
CarsDirect website says advertising+dealerservices fees together are $426.00. My dealer also wants $189.00 dealer services fee. What I find interesting is if you subtract $189.00 from $426.00 you get $237.00. Pretty close to $240.00. Coincidence?
It is just a added gross for dealer.
If it is not on the invoice it doesn't belong.
I just clicked on Dodge Dakota trucks in the new truck section and it was their.
I suggest you try it out
Do you hate the dealer that much that you are worried that they might accidentally make a little bit of profit. So what if your $200 went to dodge, the dealer, the government, the local radio station, or the sales managers pocket. You got a price on this truck that you admit no one else would come close to. What did the dealer do to you that you are so terrified that he might have made $200.
Frank
I will bet the last time you bought furniture, the dealer made more money on your couch.
Terry.
Car_man
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Also, any idea why there two amounts listed?
If you don't want to include an advertising fee when you determine how much you are going to offer for a car, that's fine. If the dealer chooses to not accept your offer, that's fine too.
After you have had your offer refused at a few dealers, you have a good indication that you have to increase your offer if you want that type of car.
That's about all there is to buying a car.
Bob
The typical dealer has $1200 in costs to sell a new car. So, any gross profit below that is essentially a loser. So take invoice and add $1200 and you have what the car costs the dealer to sell you...anything above that is profit.
Rich
No problem except half of them have no idea of how to use it correctly.
If you take Edmunds invoice pricing 10 times out of ten the invoice they get is wrong.
The consumer only reads what he wants to and they never allow for the ad fee.
10 times out of ten we are called a liar.
This causes a lot of friction between both of us.
It is alot easier to show you the invoice and let you see the true numbers
alexander46, what are the words after the ones you quoted? Something like " which may or may not apply to this car". I think it reads like that, it did when my brother got his 2001 Montana.