New Car Buying Advice
There are several steps involved when negotiating at the car dealership, getting the best price on a new car, trading-in you used vehicle, and financing. It is very important to keep all of these issues separate. Deal with each issue independently so not to confuse the final price of the new car you plan on purchasing.
New Car Price Quote
Remember to take along your new car price quote. Although this represents the car dealers lowest possible price on a new car and should include any dealer rebates and incentives offered, there is
always room to negotiate a better deal. Auto manufactures often want to get rid of slow selling cars or reduce inventory, therefore they offer cash rebates or low financing deals. Even with a great new car price quote, negotiate on the price.
Buying a New Car below Invoice Price
If the car dealer sells you a car at the invoice price, he will still make money from the deal as the
manufacturer refunds a certain percentage of the car’s price to the dealer. This is known as car dealer hold back. The car dealer holdback is a specific percentage of the car’s price that is credited to the dealer’s account periodically by the manufacturer and reduces his cost by as much as 2-3%. This can start to add up significantly, 3% on a $20,000 car is $600. The dealer could sell you the car at his invoice price and still make $600 profit. Ultimately, if you end up buying a new car for $100-$300 over dealer invoice price you have a great deal and the car dealer has made a fair profit.