โJun-17-2015 12:09 PM
โJun-29-2015 12:41 PM
โJun-22-2015 06:31 PM
coolmom42 wrote:robsouth wrote:
An RV (or anything else for that matter) is only worth what someone is willing to pay for it. Owners very often factor in sentimental values and think that their item is worth much more than what the general public thinks. This is often a rude awakening for sellers, but generally the buying public has the last say, or the item does not sell. My truck, camper, pocket knife, etc is worth a lot more to me than to you, if you get my drift.
I understand that, and I've seen some ads from private sellers that were definitely overpriced.
However, this is a dealer, who I would think would price the MH to sell.
โJun-21-2015 10:14 PM
the bear II wrote:
I had a friend who thought the sticker price was the price you had to pay for the vehicle.
I offered to go with him when he went to buy his next vehicle. He was amazed at how low the price ended up.
Dealers know there are people out there who don't like to negotiate so they start high and come down to get the maximum profit.
โJun-21-2015 08:14 PM
coolmom42 wrote:
Most of the things NADA lists as options are going to be found on 90% of RVs of the type being priced---things like AC, television, radio, awning, etc. So when looking up the NADA price, I don't add on anything unless it's really exceptional.
Is this the most realistic way to handle it?
โJun-20-2015 10:08 PM
BobR wrote:
PPL's website has a section which lists actual sales prices. Also, the advanced search feature of Ebay can be used to find out what items really sold for.
โJun-20-2015 11:39 AM
โJun-20-2015 11:25 AM
JALLEN4 wrote:
Trying to buy a unit for your personal use and limiting one's self to some magic formula based on some mythical value guide is a fool's errand.
โJun-19-2015 09:35 PM
โJun-19-2015 03:12 PM
wbwood wrote:That's a good point - which is why I never add on options when pricing out a used unit. Options are non-recoverable, however some dealers try to sell the unit by adding the 'options list' on a used unit. Always start at what the base-price is, is good advise.
I never understood why dealers won't recognize a value when you start adding options to rv's according to NADA. I guess they do it to show a lower value...but I bet if you pulled up a unit they are selling and check it against NADA that they will have the options listed...lol
โJun-19-2015 02:30 PM
PRodacy wrote:Dealers AND private party sellers are both sometimes almost 2 X NADA Low-Retail/High-Retail pricing.
When we were looking at TCs, our local dealer had one and was asking 15,000. I found the same year and model at a dealer about 5 hours away -they had it listed for 8500. I called our local dealer back, showed him the listing, and offered 8500. told them we needed a much better price or we'd go to the other dealer. They almost immediately came down to 9000, so we took it as it looked like it just came off the showroom. They also threw in Torklift tie downs and fast guns. Basically, just ignore asking prices and offer what you're willing to pay.
โJun-19-2015 07:48 AM
โJun-19-2015 07:36 AM
โJun-19-2015 06:21 AM
โJun-19-2015 06:01 AM
bcbouy wrote:
if i was going to sell an rv in the middle of camping season,i'd price it just short of laughable too.