How
To Get A Great Deal On A New Car
Before you start shopping for a
usedcar, you'll need to do some homework. Spending time now may
save you serious money later. Think about your driving habits, your
needs, and your budget.
Whether
you think of your car as an
object of love or view it merely as a way to get somewhere, having
a brand new one is bound to give you a lift. But that pleasure can
be tainted by thoughts about the cost—both the thousands of
dollars you must pay for the vehicle and the emotional cost of
coping with the hassles of making the purchase.
Fortunately, there’s a way to avoid the hassles and
get a great price. The key is competition. Get new car dealers to bid
competitively for your business.
The Center for the Study of Services, an independent
nonprofit consumer group, operates a service used by many thousands of
customers each year to get great prices on new cars. See the
“Money-Saving Help” list on the back of this pamphlet for more
information. You can use the same general approach and get a very good
price on your own. What follows is advice that comes out of the
experience of this service.
You may have had friends tell you about sitting
eyeball to eyeball for hours with new car dealers. It’s nonsense. They
wasted their time. The only leverage any customer has with a new car
dealer is the possibility that he or she will walk out—and either buy
a car from another dealer or not buy one at all.
To get a good price, you need simply set up a
competitive bidding process. You have to be careful, thorough, and
persistent, but you don’t have to know all the intricacies of the car
business.
You can start the bidding process after you’ve
decided on the make, model, and style of car you want (Toyota Camry,
4-door sedan LE V6, for example). You don’t have to know the exact
options you want.
It’s best to conduct the bidding process by phone.
If you try to do it in person, you’ll waste many hours and you’ll have
difficulty persuading salespersons that you’re really serious about
leaving and getting other dealers’ prices.
Get each dealer to bid an amount above or
below the “factory invoice price.” The factory invoice price
is the same for all dealers. So if one dealer bids $500
above invoice and a second bids $500 below
invoice, you’ll know the second is $1,000 lower priced than
the first. The “Money-Saving Help” list on the back of this
pamphlet tells you how you can get information on factory
invoice prices.
But you don’t really have to have the invoice price
information in advance; just explain to each dealer that you will
expect to be shown the actual factory invoice for any car you consider
buying. Get bids from at least five dealers. Talk only to a sales
manager or fleet manager. Here’s the basic approach:
“I’m in the market for a
(make/model/style) and I’ve made a list of dealers to call—including
one that’s out of the local area. I’ve done some homework, and I
know the approximate invoice cost of the car. What I’m doing now is
calling each dealer on my list to find out what each wants as a
markup or markdown from factory invoice cost. I would expect to be
able to take my pick of any car on your lot of the make, model, and
style I’m looking for at the markup or markdown you quote. So that
everyone is on a level playing field, I’m calling each dealer only
once, and I’m not saying what any other dealer is bidding. I assume
you will let me see a copy of the invoice for any car I pick out to
buy.
“Before we talk about your
markup or markdown from invoice, tell me are there any charges that
you will expect me to pay for advertising, document preparation, or
other services even though they are not listed on the factory
invoice? Also, are there any dealer add-ons, like rustproofing,
pinstripes, or wheel locks, that I’ll be required to pay for?”
You may want some options that aren’t factory
options. For example, some manufacturers don’t offer a radio or air
conditioning as a factory- installed option on some basic styles. If
you are interested in such dealer installed options on these
cars, you’ll need to find out each dealer’s charge to provide them.
Then ask:
“Is there a
factory-to-customer rebate in effect on this car? Please don’t take
any customer rebate into account in your bid; I assume I’ll get the
rebate separately as a further discount. “Okay, I think that’s all I
needed to go over. Now, would you like to give me a commitment as to
exactly how much markup or markdown you’ll accept above or below all
these costs we’ve just discussed?…
“What if I don’t see the car I
want on your lot but I still want to buy my car from you? Will you
exchange cars with another dealer in order to get me the car I want?
Will you still honor the bid you just gave me if you have to get the
car from another dealer? If not, how will you figure the additional
charge for this dealer exchange? What if I want to factory-order a
car? How will that affect your price commitment?”
You can go through this process with each
dealership. Don’t be intimidated. If you don’t understand something or
if answers seem fuzzy, ask again. You will almost certainly save
hundreds of dollars—many buyers will save thousands of dollars—by
following this process.
What if the dealers won’t give me a
price?
There are many excellent dealers that will respect
your businesslike approach and respond in kind. But some dealers may
not be so helpful. You may get responses like—
“I’ll beat any price you get.
Call other dealers and then call me back.”
“What do you think is a fair
markup? You tell me.”
“We don’t quote prices over
the phone. Just come in and I’ll give you the best deal in town.”
Let these dealers know: if they don’t bid, they have
no chance for your business. Be businesslike and persistent. If a
dealer won’t give you a serious bid, go on to the next dealer.
What does “factory invoice price” really
mean? Aren’t there hidden kickbacks?
The “factory invoice price” is theoretically
what the dealer paid the manufacturer for the car. The dealer will
actually have a printed invoice that shows this price figure. It is
less than the “manufacturer’s suggested retail price” (MSRP),
which is the “list price” shown on the window sticker of the car and
is the price for which the manufacturer theoretically thinks
the car should be sold to you.
Actually, almost all cars are sold below
the manufacturer’s suggested retail price, and some cars are sold to
customers below the factory invoice price.
How is it possible for a dealer to sell a car below
the factory invoice price? It is possible because the factory invoice
usually doesn’t reflect the true cost to the dealer: dealers often get
“holdbacks,” end-of-year carryover allowances, factory-to-dealer
incentive payments, and other allowances that reduce the cost below
what the factory invoice shows. Although the factory invoice price is
not the dealer’s true cost, it is a useful figure because for
identical cars it is the same for all dealers. That’s why you can use
it as a reference point for dealers’ bids.
How do rebates and incentives work?
If a car manufacturer offers a factory-to-customer
rebate, you will be able to get this rebate directly from the
manufacturer, or you can have the dealer apply the rebate to your
purchase price, further reducing the price of the car.
In contrast, a factory-to-dealer incentive
payment, sometimes referred to as a “dealer rebate,” is money the
factory gives the dealer for each car sold. The dealer can use the
money for advertising, employee bonuses, extra profit, or many other
purposes—or the dealer can pass this money along to you as a price
reduction. One of the purposes of the bidding process is to use
competition to prod dealers to give this incentive money—which
sometimes is $500, $1,000, $2,000, or even more—to you as a price
reduction. The “Money-Saving Help” list on the back of this pamphlet
tells you how to get information on rebates and incentives.
What is a good price?
There’s no one answer to this question. The right
price depends on supply and demand at the moment for the specific car
you want. Some consumer-advice articles and books give guidelines like
the following: “Shoot for $150 to $300 over invoice for a mid-size car
in good supply.” Ignore such advice. The only way to know what you
should pay is to get dealers to bid.
Do I have to know more about prices and
costs to get a good deal?
The more you know about factory-to-dealer incentive
payments, “holdbacks,” and other allowances the dealer will receive,
the better off you’ll be. It is also helpful to know what the current
market for cars is—the best prices cars like yours have recently been
selling for. That gives you a “target” price to shoot for.
But without devoting your entire life to car buying,
you can’t hope to know about all the available allowances and current
selling prices. You have to count on competition—and the fact that no
dealer knows how much the next dealer will give away—to drive down the
price to a satisfactory level.
What if a dealer won’t live up to its
bid?
This could be a problem for individual buyers, but
it doesn’t have to be if you do the bidding properly. Be very
businesslike in getting your bids. Deal only with a sales manager or
fleet manager. Review the details of the bid by phone with the dealer.
If you have access to a fax machine, have the low bidder fax a
confirmation. If a dealer tries to renege or make changes, take your
business to the next lowest bidder.
Do I need to know the exact options I
want?
You are better off not to limit dealers’ bids to a
specific set of options or a specific color. Get the dealership to
make its markup or markdown commitment applicable to any car of your
make, model, and style. This approach allows dealers to bid even if
they don’t have a car with a specific option that you might have
requested but that might not be of great importance to you.
Once you have your bids, you can call the low bidder
to check what specific options and colors are available on cars that
are on its lot or that it can get for you.
Shouldn’t I consider which dealer offers
the best repair service?
Your new car warranty will require you to use a
dealer for covered repairs. For this warranty service, you’ll
naturally want to use a dealer that is conveniently located and that
does high-quality repair work.
But you don’t have to have warranty repairs done at
the dealership that sells you the car. Your manufacturer will
reimburse any of its franchised dealers for your repair work.
So you can buy your car at the dealership that gives
you the best price, then have repairs made at a different dealership
if the other dealership is more convenient and does better work. A
dealer with a good repair shop is likely to give you good service even
if you didn’t buy there. Dealers make money on repairs and won’t want
to lose your repair business.
How should I deal with financing,
trade-in, and other extras?
You don’t want to lose the benefit of a good price
on a new car by paying too much for financing, for an extended service
contract, and for rustproofing, paint sealant, and other add-ons. You
also don’t want to get too little for your used car trade-in, if you
have one. Before you go to a dealer to buy a car, you must know the
true market value of all these extras. To avoid confusion, don’t
discuss any of these matters with a dealer until you have settled on
the price of your new car.
Financing
Check the annual percentage rate (APR) currently
being offered by banks and savings and loans in the area. If you are a
member of a credit union, check its rate.
Car manufacturers often offer special financing
plans as an alternative to customer cash rebates. Whether the
financing plan is a better deal than the cash rebate depends on the
size of the rebate, the manufacturer offered plan’s APR, the APRs
available from other lenders, the amount you’ll be borrowing, and how
long a period you’ll be borrowing for. On a 48-month loan, each
percentage point you cut your APR is the equivalent of a car price
discount of about $20.50 per $1,000 of loan.
To illustrate, assume you could get a $13,000,
48-month loan from a bank at a 10 percent APR, and that the special
manufacturer-offered plan’s rate is 5.9 percent. The savings from
using the factory plan would be estimated as follows: (10 minus 5.9)
times 13 times $20.50 = $1,093.
Extended service contracts
Extended service contracts often yield substantial
profits for the dealers that sell them and the extended service
contract companies that back them. Many new cars are very reliable, so
there are few service claims. Also, many cars now carry long
manufacturer warranties, so many service problems are covered by the
warranty, leaving little to be covered by the extended service
contract.
If you decide, despite these facts, that you want to
purchase one of these service contracts, check carefully exactly what
is covered. Almost all contracts exclude from coverage maintenance and
wear items, ranging from brake pads to exhaust system components to
air filters. And many contracts exclude—or fail to include—electrical
devices like power windows and radios, interior trim, gauges, and even
air-conditioning systems. Some contracts cover the cost of towing and
a rental car but others do not. And most contracts require you to pay
a “deductible” amount for each repair—in some cases, as much as
$100—before the service contract company pays anything.
Be sure to check whether you can get repairs done at
the selling dealer only, at any dealer of your make of car, at any new
car dealer, or at your choice of new car dealer or independent repair
shop. Since many consumers are more satisfied with repairs at
independent shops than with dealer repairs, it’s good to have the
option of using an independent shop.
Also, check how the shop will be paid. Under some
contracts, the shop simply bills the contract company; under others,
you must pay the shop, then seek reimbursement from the contract
company. Even if a service contract company says shops can bill it
directly, check with repair shops you might use to be sure they will
in fact bill the contract company; many shops have decided not to put
up with the hassle of collecting from service contract companies.
Finally, be sure the service contract company is
financially sound. Many of these companies have gone out of business
in recent years, rendering their contracts worthless. You are probably
safest with a service contract backed by an auto manufacturer, by a
large insurance company, or by a long-established independent warranty
company.
A key point:
if you want an extended service contract, you don’t
have to buy it where you buy your car or where you plan to have it
serviced. For example, you can buy your car from one Ford dealer, buy
a Ford-backed service contract from another Ford dealer, and have your
car serviced under the contract by still another Ford dealer. There
have been cases where one dealer was selling a contract for under $500
while another was selling the exact same contract for more than
$1,000.
Before you go to a dealer to purchase a car, check
other dealers for the prices and coverage of their service contracts.
Then you’ll be able to use these alternative vendors either to
negotiate a good service contract price from your dealer or to supply
you a contract if your dealer won’t meet the competition.
Other add-ons
If a dealer has already applied rustproofing, paint
sealant, or fabric protection, you will have to pay for these
treatments, but they often are overpriced. When dealers have outside
vendors come to the dealership to apply these treatments on cars, the
total cost to the dealer is usually less than $50 per car. If a dealer
tries to charge you more than that, you can regard the cost simply as
an extra markup. It’s better to buy from a dealer that applies these
treatments to cars only after a customer requests them.
With regard to rustproofing, there are special
problems. Many manufacturers recommend against
dealer-installed rustproofing. Most say such rustproofing is
unnecessary, and some are concerned that it will block weepholes and
actually contribute to rust. Burglar alarm systems, wheel
locks, and other add-ons may be worthwhile, but find out what other
dealers and independent shops will charge for these items, if you want
them, before you go to the dealer where you plan to buy. You
can use the other firms’ prices as a negotiating standard or you can
simply buy the add-ons from the other firms.
Your trade-in
You can lose the benefit of a good deal on your new
car if you don’t get a good price on the old car you are getting rid
of. The “Money-Saving Help” list on the back of this pamphlet lists
sources where you can check the approximate value of your used car.
But the best way to get a solid estimate of your used car’s value is
to take it to several new car or used car dealers to see what they
will pay you for it. Simply tell each dealer that you plan to sell
your car and that you are getting offers from at least 5 dealers. You
can expect the dealer where you buy your new car to pay you roughly
the same amount for your used car as these other dealers would pay. If
not, you might as well sell your car to one of the other dealers.
Think of trading-in as really a sale of your used
car at wholesale. If you’ve gotten a rockbottom price on your new car,
the dealer won’t be able to pay you more than the true wholesale value
for your used car. A dealer who offers a fat trade-in allowance must
be making it up on the new car price.
Remember, you can sell your used car on your own to
another consumer. By checking classified ads, you can get an idea how
much your car might sell for. That will probably be more than a car
dealer will give you for it, but selling the car on your own is more
trouble than selling it to a dealer or trading it in. You have to
advertise the car and you may have to deal with a number of potential
buyers.
Is there a right time of the year to buy
a new car?
There’s no sure way to predict. Guessing the car
market is no easier than guessing the stock market. Prices simply
respond to supply and demand. When there is excess supply, dealers
drop their prices and manufacturers throw in incentive programs to get
the market moving.
Should I shop on the Web?
There is much valuable information on car features,
prices, and other matters on the Web. There are also highly advertised
websites that will offer to sell you a car. In most cases, such sites
will refer you to dealers that have paid the sites for the referrals.
The prices that are offered may or may not be competitive. The only
way to be sure you are getting a good price is to get prices from a
number of dealers. You have to make them compete.
Should I shop outside my local area?
For most cars, it is sufficient just to reach out as
far as necessary to include at least 5 dealers in the bidding process,
but it won’t hurt to include one that’s a little farther away.
After a new year’s models come out, does
it make sense to buy one of the previous year’s models?
If you plan to keep the car only for a couple of
years, you’ll probably be better off with the new year’s model. You’ll
pay more now for the new model, but two or three years down the line
it will have a substantially higher resale value than the previous
year’s model. In contrast, if you plan to keep the car 8 or 10 years,
the previous year’s model may be a better bet. You’ll pay a lower
price now for the older model and a decade from now the difference in
resale value between the two years’ models will be small.
The best decision, of course, depends on how much
less you can pay for the previous year’s model than for the new year’s
model and on whether the new year’s model has new features that are
important to you. |