Buying a New Car on the Internet
Buying
a new car online usually means that you end up getting in touch with
a local dealership to finalize the purchase. The online part is where
you do research gather information to prepare yourself for the
purchase (and save a good deal of money as a result). The dealership
part is where you move from the virtual world of information into the
real world of bumpers, tires and salesmen.
You
can use the Internet to gather information about vehicles, arrange your
financing in advance, and save money on insurance. But you want to actually
test-drive the car, see its color for yourself, feel its leg room, examine
the trunk space, and otherwise physically engage the machine at a dealership.
And you sometimes must negotiate prices both for the trade-in
and the new car with a real salesperson.
For
these reasons, online car-buying services are often mainly referral-services
they put you in touch with a dealer in your area. The difference
between the online approach and traditional car buying is that you meet
the dealer already prepared. You can, therefore, greatly reduce the
amount of time that you spend at the dealership and the amount of negotiation
necessary to secure the deal. And above all, you can greatly reduce
the price that you pay for a vehicle. Going online to buy a car is really
a smart move.
TIP
At the time that you first visit the dealer to test drive the car, ask
for a blank copy of the dealer's standard contract. Now, however, isn't
yet the time for negotiation. You want to go home and, in the peace
and quiet of your bubble bath or whatever, read the thing and circle
any bad or confusing spots. You're then even better prepared when you
return to the dealership for the final negotiations. This tactic is
yet another way to do your homework before you get down to the real
nitty-gritty of negotiation. You're making two trips to the dealer instead
of just one, which gives you a significant advantage over just checking
things out and making the deal in a single visit.
Sure,
a few companies actually do sell cars online, and you never need meet
with a real human being to complete the transaction with such online
dealers. But these few direct-sales businesses are primarily either
credit unions, fleet-sales outfits, or brokers.
WARNING!
Car sales are probably second only to liquor sales in the number of
laws governing the transaction. What's more, many of these laws currently
rule out auto sales to consumers across state lines.
The
companies that people widely use and know on the Internet, such as Autobytel
and CarPoint, don't actually sell cars themselves. They merely put you
in touch with a dealer. You then finalize the purchase at the dealership.
Several
other chapters in this site show you how to do your homework
finding financing, insurance, the car that best suits you, the dealer
cost of that car, the value of your trade-in, and so on.
In
this chapter, I assume that you've done the homework. You've even gone
so far as to take my advice and have already chosen a nearby dealer
(for convenient servicing and maintenance) and a dealer large enough
to make negotiations as flexible as possible. What's more, you've visited
the dealer and taken a test drive finalizing your selection by
actually experiencing the car in the real world.
This
chapter, therefore, focuses on your actually buying a car the
point where you finalize the negotiations with the salesperson and pay
some money. Before getting into the details of completing the deal,
however, I'm first going to look at some of the cars that other people
are choosing. If you've already decided on your dream car, the following
lists may reinforce that decision. If you haven't yet decided, however,
perhaps checking out a few top-ten lists may inspire you.
Joining
the Crowd
If
you read some of the other chapters in this book that tell you how to
narrow your selection of a new car, but you still can't make up your
mind, maybe you just need to go with the crowd.
If you're like most people, you sometimes buy a book or a record simply
because it's a bestseller. You figure that sheer numbers of sales must
indicate satisfied customers. Popularity, after all, counts. If you
can't make up your mind, taking a look at how others made up theirs
sometimes helps.
Can
the Internet help you determine which new cars are currently selling
the best? (The answer is yes.) Which cars are the favorites of GenX
buyers or of fat-cat Boomers? Is the Earth round?
To
find out which new cars are the most requested at the CarPoint site
for the past 12 months, open your Web browser and go to www.carpoint.msn.com,
CarPoint's home page. Click the Table of Contents link. Then, in the
Featured Articles section, click CarPoint User's Top Ten.
After
You Get to the Dealer
After
you finish your online research and decide on a vehicle to purchase,
you're ready to take up arms and march right in on a dealer and
avoid getting slammed. With the advice that I offer in this site, along
with all your online research, you can now give the dealer a few hundred
dollars profit on the sale (instead of a few thousand). A few hundred
dollars, after all, is plenty of profit for the few hours the dealer
spends as you test and then negotiate terms for the new car.
Say
that, thanks to your research, you already know what car, what accessories,
and what options you want. You've already arranged insurance and financing
online. You know the dealer cost of the car you're after, and you're
prepared to ask to see the factory invoice. (See, however, the following
Warning.) Three steps to a successful purchase remain. The first step
is to discuss and finalize the money that you're to get for your trade-in.
For most of us, the trade-in provides the down payment. That's a very
good reason to insist on getting a fair price. Most new car buyers,
however, get the shaft during the trade-in negotiation.
WARNING!
I'm repeating this warning from previous chapters so that you're not
negotiating in a dreamland. You must get an accurate dealer cost of
the car that you're buying. If you get a new-car dealer-price quote
from an Internet source, it's merely an estimated dealer cost. This
figure can be a low-ball estimate by several hundred dollars. Why? It
can exclude extra options, import fees, gas charges, possible extra
advertising costs, and so on. At the dealership, ask to see the actual
factory invoice for the car that you're buying. This figure is usually
higher than the prices you get on the Internet for the standard models.
Don't decide your final offer merely on the estimated dealer-invoice
price that you find on the Internet.
Don't
give away you trade-in
All
too many people (most people, in fact) quickly cave in if a dealer offers
a really, really low price for their trade-in. In the typical trade-in
example that I describe in the following section, if you agree to the
salesperson's "considered offer," you lose money by being
either too timid or too uninformed about auto negotiating. Saving you
this ridiculous waste of good money is the topic of this section.
If
you're trading in your existing car, your first step in negotiating
at the dealership is to agree on the trade-in price. The reasons are
two: The salesperson is unlikely to start the negotiations with this
topic, so you gain immediate control of the negotiation process. More
important, most people, after buying a new car, worry that they got
too little for their trade-in. Why? Because they did get too little.
Most
people perhaps spend a couple of hours haggling over the details of
the new car they're buying, and then almost everything is set for them
to leave the lot in the shiny new car they now love. Only one ittle
detail remains: What do they get for their existing car? At this point,
most people cave and accept the (pitiful) offer that the salesperson
provides along with a song-and-dance about how "offering
this price is common these days" or "the moon is in the seventh
house" or "our mechanic reports rusting on the undercarriage"
or whatever.
No
goose this year
You
can find used car prices in the Blue Book. Three prices are available
for used cars. Imagine, for example, that your car lists for a used
retail price at $12,000. It's then likely to list for around, say, $9,000
wholesale, with an auction price of about $8,300. A salesperson is likely
to offer you around $5,700 and, if you scream and moan, the salesperson
may go up to $6,500, weeping all the way about what the sales manager
is going to do after this shockingly high price becomes general knowledge.
(No Christmas goose for his son Tiny Tim this year. Thanks to you.)
Find out the Blue Book value and the Black Book value before you start
negotiations. You want to know what the dealer can sell your car for
and remember that the auction value is a rock-bottom value. If
the dealer offers $5,700 (using the examples that I give in the preceding
paragraph), you counter with $9,000, the wholesale value. Then you can
allow the salesperson to whittle you down to a couple hundred dollars
more than the auction price of $8,300.
Just add the word firm
Don't accept any amount lower than the auction price for your trade-in
(unless you have a really good reason, such as that the entire undercarriage
is really rusting). If necessary, extract your current car from the
negotiation process. You can almost always easily get the auction price
by putting a classified ad in the paper phoning in the ad and
including the word "firm" so that you don't need to haggle
with strangers isn't that big of a deal. At the auction price, moreover,
you can be firm. Someone almost certainly is going to buy it unless
you live in some remote Wyoming outback, in which case your negotiation
strategies must take geographical extremity into account.
After
you save yourself two or three thousand dollars on the trade-in, you
can let the sales process move on to Step Two: the cost of the car that
you're buying (including all options and accessories everything).
Negotiating
the price
Not
everyone pays the same price buying the same car at the same dealership.
Remember that fact. Unlike most cultures, most Americans simply aren't
accustomed to haggling. From lack of practice, they're not good at it.
And they tend to think that it makes them look cheap, stubborn, pushy,
disagreeable, or impolite or some combination of these traits.
Unless,
however, you're willing to learn the rules of negotiating a low price,
you want to pay someone else to negotiate for you (see the section "If
You Simply Can't Negotiate," later in this chapter), or you really
want one of those new no-haggle cars (in other words, a Saturn)
expect to lose hundreds and maybe even thousands of dollars on the price
of your new car.
People
pay different prices
People pay different prices for the same car. You can pay top dollar,
or you can pay close to dealer cost or you can pay somewhere
in between. Bad negotiators may give the dealer $3,000 in profit; great
negotiators may give the dealer $300 in profit. Obviously, salesmen
and dealers prefer to get $3,000 from everyone but experience
shows that they can expect a spectrum of profit depending on how the
customer behaves during the process. If you're polite, persistent, and
prepared you can usually drive the price down near the low end
of the spectrum.
If
you follow the steps that I outline earlier in this chapter, you're
likely to get a good price from the dealer for your trade-in (or you
do after you sell it yourself through the classifieds). Now to complete
the process of buying the new car. This point is where you discuss
and finalize the price of your new car.
The
dealer is likely to begin negotiations with the full list price, acting
as if that amount's understood as the selling price. I repeat: Remember
to proceed with the negotiations at your own pace and remain ready at
all times to walk. But always stay friendly and polite. You usually
get better results if you don't make an enemy.
Stay
polite, yet firm
My favorite tactic is courteous firmness. You do your homework and you
know what price you're willing to pay. Respond to the dealer's first
offer with whatever price you've already decided you're willing to pay.
One tactic is to simply, politely make your first and final offer. You
can sit there and dicker, but make quite plain to the dealer that, no
matter what happens, you've already researched the price and you've
already made your one and only offer. Other experts suggest making a
low offer and then gradually giving in to the salesperson's attempts
to bring you up to your final offer. Whatever approach you take, make
sure that the dealer's clear that you're a serious buyer and always
remain calm and pleasant.
If
you feel pressure from the salesperson and become uncomfortable, you
can always ask for a different salesperson at that dealership. Or you
can leave and take your business elsewhere.
You
don't need to explain your personal preferences in a car or describe
your lifestyle, your hopes, and your fears. You don't need to make friends
with the salesperson or the supervisor. You've arrived at the dealership
with a precise idea of what you're willing to pay for a particular car.
You know exactly which options and accessories you want (and don't want).
You're paying cash you have a check in hand because you've already
arranged the financing. You don't need to worry about insurance because
that's finalized. You've already decided whether you want an extended
warranty and what to pay for that. You've reduced all the variables
to one: How long does the salesperson take to realize that you're not
going to change your offer?
In fact, all you need to tell the salesperson is that you're willing
to pay X dollars for X car with X accessories. It's a simple, straightforward
few hundred dollars for the dealership to make. Make the dealer aware
that he's dealing with an Internet buyer. In other words, the dealer
has a new kind of customer: someone who knows just what he wants and
is already decided on just what he's willing to pay for it. And if you
take that advice that I give you earlier in this chapter, you've already
studied a copy of the dealer's contract and made a note of any questions
that you want the dealer to clear up before you sign the deal.
If
you simply can't neqotiate
If
you absolutely can't stand negotiation but realize that, by avoiding
it, you may cost yourself as much as $2,000 or more when purchasing
a new car, consider hiring an auto consultant (also known as a buyer's
agent) who can do the dirty work for you. The cost of such a consultant
can prove remarkably reasonable, considering the savings that you get
in cash and the burden the agent lifts from those who were trained from
day one to avoid conflict at all costs. And the operative word here
is costs if you're overly passive about negotiating.
Can
you find such consultants on the Internet? Well, the Internet hosts
almost every possible topic. If you can imagine a profession, a service
or a topic, you're likely to find it available on the Internet, as the
following sections confirm.
Try
the National Association of Buyers' Associates
One good resource if you want to hire an agent is the National Association
of Buyers' Associates (at www.naba.com
on the Web).
AutoAdvisor
can help you negotiate
Another good online source of auto buyers' agents is AutoAdvisor (at
www.autoadvisor.com on the
Web).
Going,
Going, Gone! Using Online Auto Auctions
Although
you don't currently find new-car auctions on the Web, you can buy a
used car via online auctions. And now and then you can find at an online
auction a used car that's "almost new" (very low mileage).
Some experts claim that if money is your main concern, buying a low-mileage
pre-owned car is the greatest bargain going.
Why
can't you find new-car auctions online yet? Congressional politicians,
or lawmakers as they sometimes prefer us to call them, keep on making
laws! (No surprise there.) They've made laws governing interstate sales
of new autos, and those laws seriously restrict such sales to individuals
and that includes through online auctions. This situation may
change in the future, however, as these lawmakers are in the business
of making laws, so they sometimes pass new legislation that rescinds
their previous legislation.
WARNING!
You, the consumer, face another little problem with buying cars through
online auctions: The important test-drive portion of a new-car purchase
is usually impossible. Going to eBay to buy a cookbook is fine
if the description of the cookbook fails to mention that the index is
torn out and grease splatters cover many of the pages, you're out only
a few bucks. But how can you explain yourself if you spend thousands
of dollars on a car with serious flaws and then must spend thousands
more repairing those flaws? Remember the advice of your grandfather,
the farmer: Never buy a pig in a poke.
Auctions
R Us: eBay sells cars
Speaking
of eBay, the grand old leader of online auctioning added a special vehicle-auction
page to its other auction wares back in August 1999. Some cars were
put up for auction at eBay before this official recognition, but now
eBay offers this section of its site solely for vehicle auction sales.
You can find ordinary vehicles here as well as a special "Showroom"
featuring classic cars.
To
access eBay's auto zone, first go to eBay's home page (at www.ebay.com
on the Web) and then click the Automotive link.
The
week that I checked, eBay was offering 1,545 cars, 549 trucks, and 139
RVs at auction, as well as hundreds of motorcycles.
If you're not familiar with the eBay auctioning process, you can easily
learn about it by connecting to eBay. They offer excellent help and
tutorials.
Online
auctioning at Microsoft Network
If
the possibility of finding a real bargain in a car at an online auction
attracts you, in spite of the potential difficulties that I describe
in the preceding section, check out the Microsoft Network's auction
site (at www.auctions.msn.com/html
/cat17466/pagel.htm on the Web).
If
you go to the MSN car auction site, you're probably going to find its
features a little familiar if you've ever bought something from eBay
or other online auction sites.
New-vehicle
auctions
Rolling
Wheels, a very interesting online vehicle-auction site, now actually
offers new vehicles and also provides for test driving before you buy.
The site puts you in touch with one of its "member dealers"
in your area so that you can drive the model you want to bid on to see
whether it's what you're after. To discover what the Rolling Wheels
auction site offers, go to www.rollingwheels.com
on the Web.
This site describes itself in the following manner: "Your new-vehicle
auction center. The most hassle-free way to by your next new car. If
you buy a vehicles from Rollingwheels.com,
you set your price and we gurrantee that you're in and out of the dealership
in 60 minutes or less. You set your own price because and sell all our
vehicles using our exclusive auction format."
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Once
they make a choice, our clients are pre-qualified for car loans, a local
dealer calls them with exactly the car they are looking for and the
process is complete. Many other car referral services and auto loan
companies feel that they must provide you with masses of superfluous
information in order for you to make an "educated" decision
on buying a new car or buying a used car. We believe our customers know
what kind of new car or used car they want to drive. It is also our
experience that our new car buyers and our used car buyers know that
not all car loans are the same. That in fact is why they are maximizing
their efforts by shopping online. It is therefore our job to make sure
that our auto loans are competative. If you feel that you require additional
information prior to getting a car loan or purchasing a car, then please
visit another purveyor. This site and this service is not an affiliate
site and does not accept affiliates of any kind.
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