Tips for those looking to buy a car! A must read!
I have learned a few effective ways of getting an awesome deal without the headaches of wheeling and dealing. Dealers want to make the most profit possible, while you the consumer want the best deal possible. That's a dilemma we are fecaed when looking for cars. So here is an effective method that make both parties happy. You, the customer get a great deal and the dealer gets a profit. Most of the time, unfortunately, the customer has the illusion that he/she has gotten a good deal and the dealership comes out on top making a monstrous profit. Let's take the greed out the the business and make it fair for both parties.
If you have AAA, you can call them and get the dealer invoice and pay $500 over invoice guaranteed at their participating dealers. They will mail you a certificate to guarantee you that deal. Just another perk of being a AAA customer. Think I'm lying? Give them a call, you'll be glad you did.
If you don't have AAA, you can go to invoicedealers.com and/or search the net for other sites that will give you invoices. The more the merrier to shove in the face of the crooks, I mean dealers. You can get the invoice of any car you want to purchase. How can you argue with invoice price. I mean, you understand that the dealer must make a profit in order to stay in business, so you offer them a nice few hundred dollars over invoice for their troubles. Of course dealers will say that number is wrong and that their internal printout is correct. Come on, how naive are we? Anyone can type numbers on a computer and have them printed out to make it look official. I don't know how they can pull that crap and keep a straight face. Dealers have tried to push a $23000 -$25,000 invoice prices, making me laugh all the way to the next dealership. If you have any other tips, post here. This thread should be informative and educational.
Just a few other tips:
If you have good credit, you hould be able to get the best interest rate possible. Sometimes you can get 0%. Then there are others that will offer 1.9% if you can pay in 36 mos. and 2.9% for 60 months. If they run a report and you don't agree, check it yourself online for free. There may be errors that are keeping your credit score down.
Another thing dealers try is the whole monthly payment figure thing. They list the monthly payments and nothing else. This doesn't tell you a blessed thing. It doesn't give you the breakdown of how much the car cost, what the financing rate will be, or taxes & tags. I had a dealer say that the interest doesn't matter since it's compound. Was this guy serious? When I did the figures, he was trying to implement a 19% finacing charge! No, I didn't forget the decimal. He was serious, 19%! The monthly figures looked good, but when calculated, it showed to be mostly interest!
If you have AAA, you can call them and get the dealer invoice and pay $500 over invoice guaranteed at their participating dealers. They will mail you a certificate to guarantee you that deal. Just another perk of being a AAA customer. Think I'm lying? Give them a call, you'll be glad you did.
If you don't have AAA, you can go to invoicedealers.com and/or search the net for other sites that will give you invoices. The more the merrier to shove in the face of the crooks, I mean dealers. You can get the invoice of any car you want to purchase. How can you argue with invoice price. I mean, you understand that the dealer must make a profit in order to stay in business, so you offer them a nice few hundred dollars over invoice for their troubles. Of course dealers will say that number is wrong and that their internal printout is correct. Come on, how naive are we? Anyone can type numbers on a computer and have them printed out to make it look official. I don't know how they can pull that crap and keep a straight face. Dealers have tried to push a $23000 -$25,000 invoice prices, making me laugh all the way to the next dealership. If you have any other tips, post here. This thread should be informative and educational.
Just a few other tips:
If you have good credit, you hould be able to get the best interest rate possible. Sometimes you can get 0%. Then there are others that will offer 1.9% if you can pay in 36 mos. and 2.9% for 60 months. If they run a report and you don't agree, check it yourself online for free. There may be errors that are keeping your credit score down.
Another thing dealers try is the whole monthly payment figure thing. They list the monthly payments and nothing else. This doesn't tell you a blessed thing. It doesn't give you the breakdown of how much the car cost, what the financing rate will be, or taxes & tags. I had a dealer say that the interest doesn't matter since it's compound. Was this guy serious? When I did the figures, he was trying to implement a 19% finacing charge! No, I didn't forget the decimal. He was serious, 19%! The monthly figures looked good, but when calculated, it showed to be mostly interest!
- mattyboyl
- SolaraGuy Driver
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