So no other advice besides what the others have said BUT with the newest camry's, a lot of people have complained about the transmissions being poor. Jerky, hunting for gears and not the best MPG. Just something to think about.
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So no other advice besides what the others have said BUT with the newest camry's, a lot of people have complained about the transmissions being poor. Jerky, hunting for gears and not the best MPG. Just something to think about.
Never heard of those issues before
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That sort of mind set doesn't always work.
My Pops just bought a 2019 Nissan Rogue at the end of 2018 and there were a few dealers that played hardball back. They did NOT give-in to the "here is my number, get there or else" attitude. In fact when my father walked away they did not pursue him. They had the take it or leave it approach or just tried to repackage the deal to some ridiculous manner. My father already had the check in hand and for most of them, they didn't care. In fact I think most of them hated that idea, because they couldn't use THEIR lender for financing.
The new car sales business is some real shady stuff and hasn't changed its stigma at all.
That’s pretty much it right there. The sales guy and sales manager have no idea of real cost on the car. It’s equally as difficult for them to buy a car at their own store.
You’re on the right track. 10% off MSRP is my top dollar. But I’ll always throw a number out that is 15-20% to start the volley. For my new Mustang we started at 20% off until a concession at 11% off then we hammered out the trade.
Go in educated. If asking on this forum is your fist step, sadly you have many to go.
Search You Tube, specifically Chevy Dude. Do your homework, use True Car... plot your desired on paper first and have a plan.
DO NOT buy if they are going over the amount you do not want to spend.
DO NOT pay for window tint, window etching, coatings, fabric coatings, door etchings, maintenance plans (not warranty). Etc.
Whatever means they use to get to the price you want to pay is acceptable. You can’t negotiate 20% off and still expect a $1500 rebate. They will use whatever to get to the number.
Have your math done ahead of time. The finance guy is a SHARK [emoji1655] too! He will put all kinds of things into the bottom number. I caught them trying to add stuff in.
Go to dealer rater and look up the ratings for the dealership and the sales staff. Chose a sales person and Make an appointment.
Have an a, b & c vehicle picked out.
Do your home work. Negotiations are an art and skill, not a fight. Be prepared to walk away.
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Here's how I've done it. I haven't needed financing, but when I helped my son who did need financing here's how I approached it.
1. Tell them all you want to know is the "out the door price difference" between the car you want and the car you are trading. Keeps all the nonsense to minimum. I tell them I don't care what they charge for the new car, what they give me for the trade, what other "fees" they throw in - just tell me the amount of money I need to come up with to drive away in the car. Compare that number to your other offers.
2. If financing, do this separately so you can compare apples-to-apples. If you combine these two steps your true costs get convoluted.
3. You may have to do some math if one shop offers a lower price but higher financing so you can determine true cost of ownership. Do you belong to a credit union through your job or otherwise?
Good luck!
agreed. when i bought my car i had the price in writing from one dealership which was $500 under invoice. i went to another dealership and looked around and when the salesman came and we talked about pricing, he didn't budge even after i showed him the price the other dealership gave me. i asked if he would beat and/or match it and response was something like, "no, you're better off getting it over there" and started walking away...
got an offer that looks pretty good.
MSRP: $39,144.00
Your Exclusive Truecar Buying Service Price: $33,024.00
Processing Fee: $689.00
Sales Tax (VA): $1,496.55
DMV Fees (VA): $73.75
what's processing fee ? dealer add on profit ?
The worst car accidents happen on the showroom floor. My advice is to go 2-4 years used. Let someone else take the 25% depreciation that day and the other 15% over the next 3 years.