Its worth the paper its written on.
lol, yep. When we were shopping for our newest car, one dealership had some sort of $500 theft recovery fee and another had a $299 nitrogen fill package. Neither one would waive the fee. I reported them both to Nissan. It obviously did no good, because one of the two still has the nitrogen package on their website. The other tried sneaking it in. If as a dealer you’re going to let some fraudulent add on coast you a sale, then rock on. The theft recovery dealer gave me an estimated payment at 8% interest, even though Nissan finance had 2.99% and our credit ratings are over 800.He didn't counter offer at $10,450.00/split the difference. The dealer probably wouldn't let him walk over $400.00.......
When I bought my 2023 Silverado-which was a substantially more expensive vehicle than the Venza, there was some sort of $400.00 "mandatory Fee". I told the sales person I wasn't paying it. But he said it was "mandatory". I told him I wasn't paying it. He talked to the Manger and it was waived.
lol, yep. When we were shopping for our newest car, one dealership had some sort of $500 theft recovery fee and another had a $299 nitrogen fill package. Neither one would waive the fee. I reported them both to Nissan. It obviously did no good, because one of the two still has the nitrogen package on their website. The other tried sneaking it in. If as a dealer you’re going to let some fraudulent add on coast you a sale, then rock on. The theft recovery dealer gave me an estimated payment at 8% interest, even though Nissan finance had 2.99% and our credit ratings are over 800.
We marked used cars up a minimum of $3K-$5K, and that was over 20 years ago. I would have offered him less. Odds are he told his manager your offer and the manager told him to come back with that number hoping to meet somewhere in the middle. The deal is dead now so I would chalk it up and look for another deal. Or threaten to sue him using the texts as evidence. Then hope if they cut the deal that they don't mess with the car prior to delivering it to you.
Exactly, my point was imo the OP offered too much, and the salesman and the manager played it wrong. I'd look for another vehicle.They can mark them up all they want. But- under A NORMAL MARKET anyone who pays above retail Blue book better be keeping that vehicle a long time.
On a Toyota, yes. They know that some moron will come along and pay full price, or more.A guy throws out a first number and I counter at 95% and that’s a lowball?
My response to that would be that's not my problem.I once went searching for pricing on a new Mazda. I made a vain attempt at trying to avoid the situation you just described here by using their “Internet manager“ and getting pricing specifics in an email. When I got to the dealership, test drove the car, and decided to purchase, The “manager” came over and said, “we have a bit of a problem”. Our Internet manager made a “mistake” in his calculations and the car is actually going to cost you another $500.
He didn't counter offer at $10,450.00/split the difference. The dealer probably wouldn't let him walk over $400.00.......
When I bought my 2023 Silverado-which was a substantially more expensive vehicle than the Venza, there was some sort of $400.00 "mandatory Fee". I told the sales person I wasn't paying it. But he said it was "mandatory". I told him I wasn't paying it. He talked to the Manger and it was waived.
If you go to the wrong dealer they can be. I’ve got a great dealership in NW Ohio, family owned, good honest people. Unfortunately they had next to no inventory and she wanted a certain color. We then drove to a dealer in Indiana to be greeted by 4 salesman standing out front like a pack of hyenas. This dealer continued to pull one shady move after another. ... ... . We left. I even tried buying the car at home from another dealer and they had a $299 nitrogen scam going on. When I called to have it removed, they refused.
QUOTE="CKN, post: 7131387, member: 66423"]
Nissan Dealers are the equivalent of pond scum on a summer day.
At one point in my younger years I was interviewing for a job in car sales. During the interview process, I was meeting with the owner of the dealership. He was discussing the typical "sales cycle", and said that he would let customers walk even if the difference in offers was within $100. He said the business wasn't worth it to him at that point if the customer was haggling over $100. Needless to say, I didn't accept that job offer.
And that is also back, for the most part. Unless you're looking for certain Toyota products, many dealers are acting like it's 2019 again.That's a tale of another time. Pre "C" the car business was extremely competitive in most states. Dealers would do anything to make a deal.
Then Auto(un)fair moved into the area. There was your high pressure sales tactics - but at least no silly add on like pinstriping, vin etching or scotchguard or ADMU. I love the "What would you like your monthly payment to be?" with no discussion of final price until you pay earnest money to "demonstrate you are serious" hours of note paper negotiations then the yellow sales contract comes over from the floor mgr.
- Arco
They sure do push hard. Did they offer to knock some off the value so as to make it easier for you to sign up for those extra services? At Auto(un)fair (good one @ARCOgraphite !) they did that to me. I just kept saying no and the process wasn't too bad--I was buying a cheap car so at some point I think they realized they were just wasting their time when there were others out in the lobby.then saying "NO" repeatedly to the finance guy.
I'd walk as soon as that was brought up.with no discussion of final price until you pay earnest money to "demonstrate you are serious"
This was back in the mid 1990's...at a Buick/Pontiac dealership. Imagine working potentially several days with a customer, only to have the Principal turn away a deal over $100. Then they were paying a flat $100 commission on every car sold regardless of sales price. Sell at full MSRP...you get $100. Sell at $300 over invoice...you get $100. He said "We would ideally be looking for you to sell 10-15 cars per week." At a dealership in the rural suburbs...when you won't even budge on $100?? No, thanks.That's a tale of another time. Pre "C" the car business was extremely competitive in most states. Dealers would do anything to make a deal.
Happens quite a bit. Until you put paper to pen (or signoff on electronic forms) the price is all speculation on the buyer's part.I once went searching for pricing on a new Mazda. I made a vain attempt at trying to avoid the situation you just described here by using their “Internet manager“ and getting pricing specifics in an email. When I got to the dealership, test drove the car, and decided to purchase, The “manager” came over and said, “we have a bit of a problem”. Our Internet manager made a “mistake” in his calculations and the car is actually going to cost you another $500. This was my last experience purchasing a new vehicle. Should I ever do so again, I may choose to use a car buying service to see how effective that might be. I swear, the only new car purchase that I ever had that was actually pleasant was when I bought my first new car. It was a Saturn. I had gone looking at Honda Civic’s and really wanted a Civic, but the Honda dealers were jerking me around, and I felt like I was in some sort of comedy review act. I went back and looked at the Saturn, and the experience was so stress-free, I felt like I had just bought a washing machine. Unfortunately, GM could not help themselves by screwing up a good thing and Saturn is no more. The MSRP on those cars was based on market predictions and worked pretty well for them for a while. But yeah, whenever you finish a car purchase deal, you often find that you need to go home and take a shower.![]()