HACKER Q&A
📣 idontwantthis

Do You Have Any Tips for Buying a Car Without Tremendous Markup in 2023?


I was looking at the Ford Maverick and thought, "Wow, this is a remarkably functional vehicle for a reasonable price", until I looked up dealers and they were all selling each model for at least 40% over MSRP and used are even more expensive...

Can you offer any recommendations for finding a good car for close to MSRP? Any particular brands that are more reasonable these days?(You don't need to tell me about Tesla).


  👤 brudgers Accepted Answer ✓
Remember:

Whatever car it is, it's just a car that a dealer is trying to move off its lot.

Whatever the asking price, the care sales person would rather get a cut of a small markup than zero percent of a dream price.

The goal of a dealership is to not maintain inventory.

Because the factory will make more cars.

Now the practical tip: use the power of the internet to contact individual sales people about what you want. I mean a few hundred within an arbitrary radius.

You can always fly to pick up a car.

You can always have a car delivered.

The cost is rounding error on the price.

Sales people who sell a lot of cars don't need to make their entire nut on you.

Good luck.


👤 Kon-Peki
In the last month, Ford introduced and new Ranger and Toyota introduced a new Tacoma. Any of those two trucks on dealer lots right now are are old, outdated, leftovers that you might be willing to take off their hands with a large enough discount ;)

Also, look at out of state dealers. Not sure where you live, but huge markups aren’t a thing anymore, everywhere. A one-way plane ticket in the US isn’t expensive compared to huge markups.


👤 GianFabien
Have a read of: https://www.kbb.com/car-advice/buyer-beware-dealer-markups/

Might help, especially with the list of most inventory.