Did you recently take on (or consider) a loan of 84 months or longer on a car purchase?
A reporter would like to speak with you about your experience; please reach out to PR@Edmunds.com by 7/22 for details.
A reporter would like to speak with you about your experience; please reach out to PR@Edmunds.com by 7/22 for details.
Options
Any Questions for a Car Dealer?
This discussion has been closed.
Comments
---Traded a 01 Mazda Tribute, stock LX package, sand color, 28K for a new 02 Chrysler T&C eX.
Cash sale price: $28,811
Trade value: -18,442
difference =10,369
SC sales tax + 300
New tag + 29
Total cash price =10,698
Plus Payoff +10,877
Balance due OTD =21,575
Now, what seems odd to me is that the MSRP/sticker price was $27,785 SO WHY WOULD YOU SHOW 28,811???? Yes, the trade value was WAY high (18442) for a vehicle that stickered at +/-
21,500 in August 00. During negotiations the only price that we discussed was the OTD price, so dollars and cents wise it really doesn't matter to me what the BOS says but I am simply curious as to why you would use such bogus, overinflated figures just to get back to the agreed upon OTD price???
Is it for book/tax purposes, in my instance, to show a BIG profit on the new car side and when the trade is finally sold to show a BIG loss on the used car side? I understand that you can either go high trade---high new price or low-trade---low new price. Obviously with me we went high--high. Many of my car trades have been billed out using this Enron math--what gives??
Your down payment was about 25% of the 28.8K or $7236 (28.8K - OTD price, just for sake of argument)
Let's drop both numbers by 2K, so 2K less for the vehicle and 2K less for your trade.
So now we have (26.8K - OTD) price or about $5236 down, and as a percentage that is about 19% down.
There might be a big break in the finance rates at 20 or 25% down. I won't open the can of worms about who gets the break, the dealer or you, oops
But that is one reason the numbers are juggled. Yes, a magic 5% just because they over allowed on the trade.
I do suspect there is a point where you can't get away with that. Otherwise, they would just add $1million to everything. They everyone puts about 99% down, LOL. (Example, Chrysler cost 1028811, trade allowance = (1018442 - Payoff) = 1007565 down or over 95% down 8^) )
Now you know why the NADA, Edmunds, KBB trade numbers are so outta wack. I'm sure there are a lot of over allows in the data.
TB
Not a dealer, but learning everyday.
as far as the down payment percentage in relation to the interest rate, the 5.88 rate was what the banker offered over the phone. At that time he had no idea what I was going to buy or how much $$ I wanted, etc. The banker knows me by name and having done several autos, etc. with him he knows that my credit is good so I am sure that I could have borrowed 100% and it would not have been an issue. Thnaks for your comments and thoughts!!!
Otherwise, Peoplefirst would have been my second choice.
It has 29,000 miles on it.
Here is the deal:
the price is down to 8,600
including everything (tax etc.)
we get to 9222.
Now I am pushing for a warranty which will be 1445.
I have 2 questions. Is this a really good deal?
ok more than 2, lol. How much should this be with financing? I am working out 7.5 as my bank will offer me that, so I wont go over it.
Does the warranty get financed in?
If you can help me figure this out, I would be greatful. It will help me to know if what I will hear today is good or what.
I might get a car!!!!
I have been without one for 2 years, please send me good news! hehe.
thanks!
I've been considering a 9-5 Linear Wagon. Dealers around here listed in the paper yesterday anywhere from $9-10K off MSRP for one with premium package. This brings it to about $27K.
I usually keep cars for 4-5 years and put around 15K annually. Bill - you always say lease em or buy em used. I've never leased but feel at 15K I'd get killed even with prepay on miles. I'm pretty picky on buying used so I prefer new.
After 5 years would I have nothing to show for all my money? Or should I just wait to see what the Mazda 6 is like or consider an A4 Avant/V70?
Oh and uhmm I'd like to get a stick.
I'm planning to buy a used car for the first time..in the $10,000 price range(+/- 2000k).
I'm mostly looking at maxima's, camry's , and maybe galants, nothing hard to find.
How much off the dealer's asking price should I realistically expect to get?
For new cars, anything close to invoice or 10% seems like the general rule. Used cars have much more variables with mileage, year, condition, etc.
I don't want to get a bad deal, but also don't want to start off negotiations with an absurd discount request. Thanks in advance.
Impossible to tell, depends on the dealer as well as the car. And how long they've had it (Carfax is your friend here). $2000 off asking price may still be to high in some cases, but Bill once said about ad prices in the newspaper: "I don't spend $$ to advertise my second-best price". Meaning, of course, that once he advertised a price on a car, there was little room to dicker. Others agreed, but some dealers in my town still advertise sky-high prices. No rules of thumb apply, I think.
Best to find a car you like, ask nicely in real-world trade-in values, then write "$xxxx + TTL" on the buyer's order and let the chips fall... Oh, and FWIW, my independent mechanics ALL hate to work on Nissan cars...
Good luck, let us know,
-Mathias
East Lansing, MI
l..o..l..
Terry.
the car you want to think about today is the same one someone else thought about yesterday is coming back to buy today
or some such thing....lol i'm just kidding of course
karz
And you're question is......
BTW, sounds like you're getting ripped all the way round. Mazda dealer is padding your interest rate; go to Peoplefirst.com or eloan for better new car rates than your bank; plenty of CRV's on the ground all over America so keep shopping.
Mazda on the other hand has lots of Tributes to sell.
That's all I'll say...:)
I know that you (and Terry) are big purveyors of used cars and that's what the "smart shopper" should be looking into. I've read that you've said to buy used and hold on to the car for 2 years. The obvious benefit to owning a used car is the fact that someone else took the depreciation hit. Also by trading up every 2 years to a new used car, your cash outlay is minimized (on a depreciating asset). My question is, are you saying to buy a 1 or 2 year old car and hold onto it for 2 years or buy a 3 or four year old car and hold onto it for 2 years? Can you give me some real world examples using vehicles on the used market (Honda Accord EX-V6 and BMW 3 series)?
2001 Prelude Type SH, 2022 Highlander XLE AWD, 2025 Camry SE AWD
A good example is a 00 Volvo S80 -- loaded up new, around $41 .. 2 years later, $25/26ish. This vehicle has been sittin' around that price for almost a year .. that's a Good purchase. Take a nice, clean Lexus 99 GS300 .. a year ago, doing $32ish, a year later they are doing close to that ..
Honda's, they get to a certain price .. and kinda hover around. Bimmers, a 99 328i are not much less than a couple of grand or so, from last year ..
I guess the point is, not many folks can afford a $40,000+++ vehicle .. but a ton, can afford a $29/$25/$21,000 vehicle .. if it's a nice clean, low mileage "baby doll", that dog will hunt for a huge market.
I hope this makes sense ...
Terry.
Why not a Ford Escape? Same car and maybe a better price?
The Tribute suspension is tuned a bit more sporty than the Escape.
I'd choose Tribute over Escape, but your criteria may differ.
TB
But the "real deal" is, at trade time, they will be worth a little bit more than the Escape .. based on todays market, there is a $1,500+ difference between the two. Try going after the ES, the more loaded they are, the more they are worth and trade or sale time.
Terry.
2001 Prelude Type SH, 2022 Highlander XLE AWD, 2025 Camry SE AWD
You're saying that if you're going to buy new, then lease, otherwise buy used.
Forgive me for being skeptical, but I know some very shady characters (who put a switch in their car to shut off the odometer so the miles don't accumulate as fast). This one guy bought a 2001 BMW 330CiC fully loaded to the gills. He installed the switch in his car so the miles don't appear to accumulate. He has the car detailed once a week and put brand new tires on it. He traded it in and the car had something like 45,000 miles on it. It showed 3000 miles. How can yopu prevent this?
2001 Prelude Type SH, 2022 Highlander XLE AWD, 2025 Camry SE AWD
At that time, the vehicle goes TMU .. which is a law suit waiting to happen, even if you sell the vehicle, private .. .. It's not nice to try too fool "Mother Nature" -- ..l.o.l..
Terry.
2001 Prelude Type SH, 2022 Highlander XLE AWD, 2025 Camry SE AWD
But, sooner or later he will trade the vehicle in .. someone, somewhere, will pull into a Bimmer Dealer and have some work done "under warranty" .. and when it get's picked up, the Dealer will just paper trail it -- and Wango Tango, someone is going to court for fraud --
We went through this about 9 months ago, a customer sold it to us in FL, customer lives outside of Charlotte, tried to grab us for the mileage "question" .. we took it to BMW, they found the true mileage from the service work through them -- right now, they have to come up with $4,727.89 or they get to wear those pretty little silver cuffs, thats via the Judge -- sooner or later, either by registration, safety check, state inspection, etc. it catches up -- kinda remember, it's like Enron, 2 sets of books ...
Terry.
Just my opinion.. M.
Perhaps "telling" a story to Nyccarguy - was more fun than the real story ..l.o.l..
Terry ;-)
BTW, I would be leery of internet financing too...
: )
Mackabee