New Car Rebates
And Incentives
Let's take a
look at the new car rebate and incentive.
The dealer cost or the
dealer invoice is usually fairly close to what the dealer actually
paid for the cars on their lot.
However, these invoices don't always
tell the whole story about what the car ultimately cost the dealer.
This is because the auto makers very
often offer dealer incentives or discounts to the dealer for
purchasing the auto maker's cars. This is how dealers can sometimes
advertise and sell their cars at what they tout as "at or below
factory invoice prices"!
This really
should fly in the face of your intelligence.
Think about it.
What
business in the world could last selling their product at the price
that they bought it for!
C'mon
do some hypothetical math. How long could a grocery store pay the
rent on their building, pay their employees a wage, their taxes, the
utility bills, and on and on if they pay their supplier $5 for a
case of beans and sell that same case of beans for $5????
They
CAN'T.
Wait, let me restate that. They CAN'T and they WON'T!
And by the way, neither would you. So, this
marketing crap, at or
below invoice, or just $50 over factory invoice just shouldn't fly
in your mind.
Yeah, how many cars at just $50 over what you paid for
them would have to sell just to pay the monthly payment on your
multi-million dollar building that you sell these cars from?
Sure
the invoice that the dealer shows you (if you can get them to do so)
may be on paper what the dealer paid for the car, but it is probably
far from what the car's net cost to the dealer will actually be.
This should tell
you that the money coming to the dealer in the form of factory to
dealer rebates and incentives can be quite extensive. This is why
the MSRP sticker on the window of the car is just an asking price
subject to you rolling up your sleeves and negotiating it.
Just about every
car comes to the dealer with some type of dealer incentive on it.
And every car comes to the dealer with what automakers refer to as
'holdback'. Holdback is essentially a refund to the dealer from the
manufacturer after the dealer sells the car. Usually around 1 to 3
percent.
Unlike the rebates and incentives that dealer receive from
the auto maker that may be passed along to the buyer to entice
them to buy, you'll not see holdback ever offered up as a bargaining
chip.
Holdback is indeed an interesting animal here is more on
dealer holdback.
By now it should
be perfectly clear to you as to the importance of doing some
research and getting a pretty good idea of money figures involved in
dealer invoice, new car incentives and rebates, factory to dealer rebates, and at least be
aware of holdback, before you go out and play the negotiating my
dollars shell game.
And with today's internet and websites available
to you, there really is no excuse for you not getting this
information under your belt before you head out. And just because
you may have this information, it doesn't mean you'll be able to get
the car deal of the century.
But, without it, I would almost
guarantee you'll pay more than you had to.
Next
Auto Dealer
Incentives

- Get Free price quotes and vehicle information.
- Get multiple local dealer
selling prices!
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