Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Competition is your friend. Email every dealer within your reasonable travel distance with the exact model/trim/color(s) you want. If they have it on the lot, identify it. Tell them all you are sending similar emails to all the dealers in the area and will purchase immediately from the dealer with the best price inclusive of all fees.
I've purchased 2 Hondas and an Acura using this method and it worked out well each time.
Here's the email form I used last time I did this:
"I am ready to purchase a new [insert model/trim/color(s)] (Model Code _____). You have such a vehicle on your lot (VIN _______). Please email your best price inclusive of the destination/freight fee and any and all dealer document/processing/advertising fees so that only tax, tags, and registration for a Fairfax County, Virginia resident will be added to arrive at the final out-the-door price. I'm sending similar messages to several other local dealers that have this exact vehicle in stock as well. I will select the dealer that offers the lowest price within the next 48 hours. Once I pick the dealer, I will immediately place a deposit with my credit card and then take delivery and make final payment over the weekend. I look forward to your response."
And with the inventory being short, that email will just be ignored. It’s not a buyers market anymore.
Totally depends on which car. There are plenty of models that are buyers market. Acura MDX is literally advertising 7500 off right now.
Almost impossible to disagree with statements like that but, for most cars most people like to buy or wouldn't mind buying, this strategy is about 5 years too old.
- np
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Competition is your friend. Email every dealer within your reasonable travel distance with the exact model/trim/color(s) you want. If they have it on the lot, identify it. Tell them all you are sending similar emails to all the dealers in the area and will purchase immediately from the dealer with the best price inclusive of all fees.
I've purchased 2 Hondas and an Acura using this method and it worked out well each time.
Here's the email form I used last time I did this:
"I am ready to purchase a new [insert model/trim/color(s)] (Model Code _____). You have such a vehicle on your lot (VIN _______). Please email your best price inclusive of the destination/freight fee and any and all dealer document/processing/advertising fees so that only tax, tags, and registration for a Fairfax County, Virginia resident will be added to arrive at the final out-the-door price. I'm sending similar messages to several other local dealers that have this exact vehicle in stock as well. I will select the dealer that offers the lowest price within the next 48 hours. Once I pick the dealer, I will immediately place a deposit with my credit card and then take delivery and make final payment over the weekend. I look forward to your response."
And with the inventory being short, that email will just be ignored. It’s not a buyers market anymore.
Anonymous wrote:If you aren't married to the idea of buying new, maybe Carmax would be better for you. No back-and-forth on pricing; very clear on their website what's on the lot at a particular dealership and what isn't and how much it would be to ship a car you like to your closest Carmax.
Otherwise...call the dealership and ask for sales, tell them you're looking for a 2023 Make Model in blue or gray, you're looking to make an expedited purchase in the next week, can they please confirm their current stock and, if what you want is available, can they get the paperwork started? You can complete the credit application and initial paperwork from home, then just go in for the part where you meet with the business manager to make the purchase. Even faster if you're paying cash or have already secured financing and you're certain you have the lowest possible rate (however, if buying new they might have rate incentives that make more sense).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Competition is your friend. Email every dealer within your reasonable travel distance with the exact model/trim/color(s) you want. If they have it on the lot, identify it. Tell them all you are sending similar emails to all the dealers in the area and will purchase immediately from the dealer with the best price inclusive of all fees.
I've purchased 2 Hondas and an Acura using this method and it worked out well each time.
Here's the email form I used last time I did this:
"I am ready to purchase a new [insert model/trim/color(s)] (Model Code _____). You have such a vehicle on your lot (VIN _______). Please email your best price inclusive of the destination/freight fee and any and all dealer document/processing/advertising fees so that only tax, tags, and registration for a Fairfax County, Virginia resident will be added to arrive at the final out-the-door price. I'm sending similar messages to several other local dealers that have this exact vehicle in stock as well. I will select the dealer that offers the lowest price within the next 48 hours. Once I pick the dealer, I will immediately place a deposit with my credit card and then take delivery and make final payment over the weekend. I look forward to your response."
And with the inventory being short, that email will just be ignored. It’s not a buyers market anymore.
Totally depends on which car. There are plenty of models that are buyers market. Acura MDX is literally advertising 7500 off right now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Competition is your friend. Email every dealer within your reasonable travel distance with the exact model/trim/color(s) you want. If they have it on the lot, identify it. Tell them all you are sending similar emails to all the dealers in the area and will purchase immediately from the dealer with the best price inclusive of all fees.
I've purchased 2 Hondas and an Acura using this method and it worked out well each time.
Here's the email form I used last time I did this:
"I am ready to purchase a new [insert model/trim/color(s)] (Model Code _____). You have such a vehicle on your lot (VIN _______). Please email your best price inclusive of the destination/freight fee and any and all dealer document/processing/advertising fees so that only tax, tags, and registration for a Fairfax County, Virginia resident will be added to arrive at the final out-the-door price. I'm sending similar messages to several other local dealers that have this exact vehicle in stock as well. I will select the dealer that offers the lowest price within the next 48 hours. Once I pick the dealer, I will immediately place a deposit with my credit card and then take delivery and make final payment over the weekend. I look forward to your response."
And with the inventory being short, that email will just be ignored. It’s not a buyers market anymore.
Anonymous wrote:Competition is your friend. Email every dealer within your reasonable travel distance with the exact model/trim/color(s) you want. If they have it on the lot, identify it. Tell them all you are sending similar emails to all the dealers in the area and will purchase immediately from the dealer with the best price inclusive of all fees.
I've purchased 2 Hondas and an Acura using this method and it worked out well each time.
Here's the email form I used last time I did this:
"I am ready to purchase a new [insert model/trim/color(s)] (Model Code _____). You have such a vehicle on your lot (VIN _______). Please email your best price inclusive of the destination/freight fee and any and all dealer document/processing/advertising fees so that only tax, tags, and registration for a Fairfax County, Virginia resident will be added to arrive at the final out-the-door price. I'm sending similar messages to several other local dealers that have this exact vehicle in stock as well. I will select the dealer that offers the lowest price within the next 48 hours. Once I pick the dealer, I will immediately place a deposit with my credit card and then take delivery and make final payment over the weekend. I look forward to your response."
Anonymous wrote:If you aren't married to the idea of buying new, maybe Carmax would be better for you. No back-and-forth on pricing; very clear on their website what's on the lot at a particular dealership and what isn't and how much it would be to ship a car you like to your closest Carmax.
Otherwise...call the dealership and ask for sales, tell them you're looking for a 2023 Make Model in blue or gray, you're looking to make an expedited purchase in the next week, can they please confirm their current stock and, if what you want is available, can they get the paperwork started? You can complete the credit application and initial paperwork from home, then just go in for the part where you meet with the business manager to make the purchase. Even faster if you're paying cash or have already secured financing and you're certain you have the lowest possible rate (however, if buying new they might have rate incentives that make more sense).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. He finally wrote back stating the car I want has already been sold. Funny how he didn't mention that part when he was pressuing me to come in to the dealership. Hmm. Definitely not interested in them anymore. Thanks all.
You didn't make it sound like you were talking about a specific car if you're talking about "acceptable colors" and the trim you wanted. Was the car you wanted at the dealer?
Yes. They had the car in the year/trim/color I would take. I hit the "request an e-price on this car" button on the page of the exact car and input my information. He knew exactly which car I was asking about and neglected to mention it was sold until I refused to come in. Sleezy. Do people actually fall for these tactics?