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submitted 3 months ago by manualoverride@lemmy.world to c/evs@lemmy.world

This is just a rant… maybe a discussion starter

Margins on 2nd hand and new electric cars are thin, gone are the days where you could get 25% off a new car, and thin margins mean lower commission.

Servicing costs are minimal so no kickbacks for selling the servicing plans.

People are wise to paint protection and alloy wheel cover that cost more than a refurb.

EV buyers tend to make better decisions and are more likely to be cash buyers or finance elsewhere, so no kickback for selling a finance plan.

Manufacturers still selling higher margin hybrid and ICE vehicles mean they are the real target for salespeople.

Manufacturers also want to shift their ICE inventories and new products so they are still pushing the FUD on electric, and myths like “EVs will be obsolete once Hydrogen cars come out, you may as well get an ICE car in the meantime.”

I’ve had a really bad customer experiences at Toyota, Honda and now Kia dealerships.

I know people will suggest the Tesla online sales model, but Musk is just ruining the brand to the point where I can’t buy or recommend one.

So now I’m going to do all my own research, find the exact car I want, and contact the dealer/seller directly while avoiding as much interaction as possible.

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[-] Anticorp@lemmy.world 3 points 3 months ago

You're more likely to get a better deal if you use their financing since they make money on that too, and they usually have competitive rates if you have good credit.

[-] lemming741@lemmy.world 7 points 3 months ago

They shuffle numbers around to make it look good. They'll pad the price so they can show you a good rate. Why do you think they ask about financing so early in the process?

They're crooks, the lot of them. Never trust someone that can write numbers upside down.

[-] Anticorp@lemmy.world 2 points 3 months ago

They ask for financing early on so they don't waste time talking to someone who can't even buy a car. There are a lot of people who go look at cars that can't actually buy one.

You're right that they shuffle things around, but if you remove an entire revenue stream from the equation, you're going to get a worse price on the car than if you could get by financing through them. They can often offer the same rate that the credit union is offering, but they make a couple grand in kick-backs from the bank. They will sometimes use that kickback to offset the price of the car.

this post was submitted on 07 Aug 2024
49 points (86.6% liked)

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