May-18-2016 08:58 AM
May-19-2016 04:52 AM
NC Hauler wrote:tplife wrote:
Most dealers won't accept TruCar relationships for that very reason, and any salesman who matches their pricing is going to be out of a job unless he makes the lost profit and costs back on the trade. The opinions given above who suggest otherwise don't know the industry. CarMax is also notorious for lowballing trade-in values and only beat dealers by a small amount statistically. (When between labs I stay busy with a seller's license, I'm GMC and Ford Certified.) If you need to buy a vehicle, get your advice from Consumer Reports. Getting it from where you are reading this right now is not the place.
I'd just as soon read about real life experience's on this forum, and glean from there than trust a rag like Consumers report:R IF I'd listened to them, I'd NEVER owned a Jeep!!Better yet, probably not a Dodge/Ram!! I've owned Jeeps since 1980, and NEVER had an issue. Jeep Wranglers, Jeep Grand Cherokees, Patriot's a Compass and several Cherokees...in my instances....they were DEAD WRONG....as they usually are...No probe with my trucks since 2010 either.
Consumer reports says wrote:
If you think so, then more power to ya. My 2 year old is convinced the earth is flat too, after all, his experience is that he has never walked upside down.
I wouldn't use consumer reports as the end all, be all. It's simply one bit of information. CR simply reports on trends for reliability, which doesn't mean if you buy a Yugo it will be a disaster or buy a Honda/Toyota it will never break. Why people vilify a company who at least makes the effort to be honest and protect the consumer is perplexing.
May-19-2016 04:41 AM
2oldman wrote:
Nothing unusual here. Dealers do whatever they can to make as much profit as they can. I bet they hate the internet.
May-19-2016 04:34 AM
TucsonJim wrote:
Dealerships make money two ways. The first is on the selling price of a vehicle. The higher they can take you, the more profit for them. The second is on the trade in. The lower they offer, the more profit.
I'd suggest that if you're going to purchase using a fixed price system like TrueCar, you sell your previous vehicle via a private party. Once you have the cash in hand, then you can proceed with the purchase.
Whenever you're dealing with a car dealer, you have to be willing to walk away from the deal. Another tactic is to pit two or more dealers against each other.
May-19-2016 04:19 AM
carringb wrote:X2. Take it to Car Max if you don't want to sell it yourself.
CarMax has a very honest, no pressure vehicle appraisal department, and you can walk out with a check that day if you take them on their offer. We did it on a Honda Civic, and they offered 2.5x what the Ford dealer did, and was close to what we could have expected for a private party sale.
May-19-2016 03:08 AM
May-18-2016 11:08 PM
May-18-2016 07:01 PM
rhagfo wrote:TucsonJim wrote:
Dealerships make money two ways. The first is on the selling price of a vehicle. The higher they can take you, the more profit for them. The second is on the trade in. The lower they offer, the more profit.
I'd suggest that if you're going to purchase using a fixed price system like TrueCar, you sell your previous vehicle via a private party. Once you have the cash in hand, then you can proceed with the purchase.
Whenever you're dealing with a car dealer, you have to be willing to walk away from the deal. Another tactic is to pit two or more dealers against each other.
X2 to being able to walk away!!!
May-18-2016 03:25 PM
May-18-2016 02:28 PM
Lantley wrote:tplife wrote:
Most dealers won't accept TruCar relationships for that very reason, and any salesman who matches their pricing is going to be out of a job unless he makes the lost profit and costs back on the trade. The opinions given above who suggest otherwise don't know the industry. CarMax is also notorious for lowballing trade-in values and only beat dealers by a small amount statistically. (When between labs I stay busy with a seller's license, I'm GMC and Ford Certified.) If you need to buy a vehicle, get your advice from Consumer Reports. Getting it from where you are reading this right now is not the place.
Car Fax is paying wholesale value.
They are generally paying what the car is worth with fewer gimmicks than a traditional dealer.
There are only 3 options: sell yourself, trade it in or Carfax
Carafe is a good option to have
May-18-2016 02:19 PM
tplife wrote:
Most dealers won't accept TruCar relationships for that very reason, and any salesman who matches their pricing is going to be out of a job unless he makes the lost profit and costs back on the trade. The opinions given above who suggest otherwise don't know the industry. CarMax is also notorious for lowballing trade-in values and only beat dealers by a small amount statistically. (When between labs I stay busy with a seller's license, I'm GMC and Ford Certified.) If you need to buy a vehicle, get your advice from Consumer Reports. Getting it from where you are reading this right now is not the place.
May-18-2016 02:17 PM
tplife wrote:
Most dealers won't accept TruCar relationships for that very reason, and any salesman who matches their pricing is going to be out of a job unless he makes the lost profit and costs back on the trade. The opinions given above who suggest otherwise don't know the industry. CarMax is also notorious for lowballing trade-in values and only beat dealers by a small amount statistically. (When between labs I stay busy with a seller's license, I'm GMC and Ford Certified.) If you need to buy a vehicle, get your advice from Consumer Reports. Getting it from where you are reading this right now is not the place.
May-18-2016 02:14 PM
May-18-2016 01:57 PM
May-18-2016 01:33 PM