schaffer05
Full Access Member
- Joined
- May 15, 2017
- Posts
- 153
- Reaction score
- 111
I know my number going in. I tell them the number I want. If I have a trade, they get all the information on the truck, but nothing about how much I owe, how much I want, what my payments are. Once they make me an offer on my trade (I've already researched what it's worth) I tell them they need to come up. I usually get top KBB price or higher.
The big thing is to play dealers against each other. If one dealer has the specific vehicle you want, and they're not willing to work a deal for you, find another dealer that is and ask them to do a dealer acquisition for it.
I just traded my 2016 Tundra that I had for a year and 12k miles. I paid 38 for it brand new, got 37 for it on trade, and got my Tahoe for 15% off.
Dealer I got it from originally wouldn't give me more than 35500 for my truck, had another dealer try to get it away from them. Next morning they called wanting to make the deal with the 37k trade (what I told them I wanted, but hadn't been offered more than 36 by any other dealer).
With today's technology, I don't think there is any reason to set foot in the dealership until you're ready to sign paperwork. If they're not willing to deal like that, they're not worth dealing with. If you have a trade get it looked at by a couple local dealers, then you can branch out. Place I got my Tahoe from was over 5 hours away each way. They offered me 37k sight unseen on my truck, other than pictures.
Also, some people don't realize, but even the interest rate is negotiable. Dealers often add on a little % and that's money in their pocket.
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The big thing is to play dealers against each other. If one dealer has the specific vehicle you want, and they're not willing to work a deal for you, find another dealer that is and ask them to do a dealer acquisition for it.
I just traded my 2016 Tundra that I had for a year and 12k miles. I paid 38 for it brand new, got 37 for it on trade, and got my Tahoe for 15% off.
Dealer I got it from originally wouldn't give me more than 35500 for my truck, had another dealer try to get it away from them. Next morning they called wanting to make the deal with the 37k trade (what I told them I wanted, but hadn't been offered more than 36 by any other dealer).
With today's technology, I don't think there is any reason to set foot in the dealership until you're ready to sign paperwork. If they're not willing to deal like that, they're not worth dealing with. If you have a trade get it looked at by a couple local dealers, then you can branch out. Place I got my Tahoe from was over 5 hours away each way. They offered me 37k sight unseen on my truck, other than pictures.
Also, some people don't realize, but even the interest rate is negotiable. Dealers often add on a little % and that's money in their pocket.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
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