Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not all car dealerships like the above. And if you get there late around the closing time the slimy finance guy would want nothing more than to go home asap. They are required by their dealership to offer you all that extra crap but they will be happy for you say no and get tf out of there
No clue how this response is helpful to OP. S/he asked about financing at the dealership vs credit union. They are nervous about the process. And your answer is to get there late so the experience is rushed? Which, I'd note, doesn't address where to finance.
I'd also note that the fact that you felt the need to suggest ways to stop F&I from preying on people in and of itself confirms what I wrote about slimy dealerships. If they weren't slimy, you wouldn't need a strategy for how to avoid them.
Oh boy aren’t you a peach. An argumentative one.
And by that you mean, "Yeah, I replied with a useless answer and got called out on it. Instead of slinking away like I should have I replied with an ad hominem attack because I've got nothing else."
Lol, don’t get mad hominem. Tell us more about your battles over accessories discounts. It is so useful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not all car dealerships like the above. And if you get there late around the closing time the slimy finance guy would want nothing more than to go home asap. They are required by their dealership to offer you all that extra crap but they will be happy for you say no and get tf out of there
No clue how this response is helpful to OP. S/he asked about financing at the dealership vs credit union. They are nervous about the process. And your answer is to get there late so the experience is rushed? Which, I'd note, doesn't address where to finance.
I'd also note that the fact that you felt the need to suggest ways to stop F&I from preying on people in and of itself confirms what I wrote about slimy dealerships. If they weren't slimy, you wouldn't need a strategy for how to avoid them.
Oh boy aren’t you a peach. An argumentative one.
And by that you mean, "Yeah, I replied with a useless answer and got called out on it. Instead of slinking away like I should have I replied with an ad hominem attack because I've got nothing else."
Lol, don’t get mad hominem. Tell us more about your battles over accessories discounts. It is so useful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not all car dealerships like the above. And if you get there late around the closing time the slimy finance guy would want nothing more than to go home asap. They are required by their dealership to offer you all that extra crap but they will be happy for you say no and get tf out of there
No clue how this response is helpful to OP. S/he asked about financing at the dealership vs credit union. They are nervous about the process. And your answer is to get there late so the experience is rushed? Which, I'd note, doesn't address where to finance.
I'd also note that the fact that you felt the need to suggest ways to stop F&I from preying on people in and of itself confirms what I wrote about slimy dealerships. If they weren't slimy, you wouldn't need a strategy for how to avoid them.
Oh boy aren’t you a peach. An argumentative one.
And by that you mean, "Yeah, I replied with a useless answer and got called out on it. Instead of slinking away like I should have I replied with an ad hominem attack because I've got nothing else."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here. I'm genuinely appreciative of all the bits of advice, relayed experiences, and wisdom everyone has offered. Truly. Thank you.
I spend a lot of time in Delaware. No sales tax there. Does anyone have insight about whether it would be advantageous to buy there as opposed to MD?
You don’t pay taxes in the state where you purchase the car. You pay taxes in the state where you register it.
If you live in MD and purchase the car in DE, you’ll pay MD taxes.
Purchase the car in DE only if this is where you find the car you want at a better price.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not all car dealerships like the above. And if you get there late around the closing time the slimy finance guy would want nothing more than to go home asap. They are required by their dealership to offer you all that extra crap but they will be happy for you say no and get tf out of there
No clue how this response is helpful to OP. S/he asked about financing at the dealership vs credit union. They are nervous about the process. And your answer is to get there late so the experience is rushed? Which, I'd note, doesn't address where to finance.
I'd also note that the fact that you felt the need to suggest ways to stop F&I from preying on people in and of itself confirms what I wrote about slimy dealerships. If they weren't slimy, you wouldn't need a strategy for how to avoid them.
Oh boy aren’t you a peach. An argumentative one.
Anonymous wrote:Op here. I'm genuinely appreciative of all the bits of advice, relayed experiences, and wisdom everyone has offered. Truly. Thank you.
I spend a lot of time in Delaware. No sales tax there. Does anyone have insight about whether it would be advantageous to buy there as opposed to MD?