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Buying a new car ….. CRAZY

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August 29, 2021, 09:22 AM
Blackmore
Buying a new car ….. CRAZY
quote:
Originally posted by Flash-LB:
I bought a new 2021 Ford Bronco Sport for $500 under MSRP 5 months ago and it was a pretty easy, smooth deal. They threw in 2 free years of bumper to bumper service to sweeten the deal and gave me KBB for my trade in and yes, I checked before I went in.

Now I'm hearing they get marked up $4K~$8K over MSRP.

Nuts


My brother just had Vroom offer him $4000 more than he paid for his 2021 Bronco and he has nearly 8K miles on it! Eek


Harshest Dream, Reality
August 29, 2021, 09:33 AM
MelissaDallas
I bought a pristine 2017 Camry XLE in 2019. Had a little less than 12,000 miles on it and currently has just under 18,000. Paid it off in a year and essentially it is a new car. Dealership I bought it from called, texted and emailed me Friday, sending me an offer to “upgrade me” with a comparison table, of course, just based on a couple of features and a monthly payment. “Conveniently” the table showed my XLE as a 2017 SLE. In 2021 there is about a $4000 difference in the trim packages. I responded to them just to call them out on the duplicity of comparing my much nicer car to a lesser model. Told them I couldn’t imagine why I would trade in an essentially new much nicer paid off car for a car payment.
August 29, 2021, 10:30 AM
RogueJSK
quote:
Originally posted by Blackmore:
My brother just had Vroom offer him $4000 more than he paid for his 2021 Bronco and he has nearly 8K miles on it! Eek


Cool. But the problem is, he'd have to turn around put an extra $4000+ towards buying a comparable replacement, so it'd still be a net wash/loss.

Similar situation to the real estate market. A great time to be selling a spare second home/car, where you'll make a nice profit. But not as great a time to be selling your sole car/home and having to immediately buy another, since the profit you'd make on the inflated sale has to then be dumped into the inflated new purchase.