English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I am curious has anyone out there purchased a used car from a no-hassle/haggle dealer and the dealer actually lowered the price? Specifically, the dealership is CarMaxx.

2006-12-01 10:10:00 · 3 answers · asked by K C 1 in Cars & Transportation Buying & Selling

3 answers

hm-mm..2 hours & no answers.
This is probably because, if Carmax were offering discounts (or allowing 'negotiations'), they could have a class action suit against them.
They advertise the "no-haggle" pricing. Therefor 'haggling' would be considered false advertising.
At Carmax the price IS the price.
There is plenty of profit for the dealer in a Carmax price, & they are not willing to take less.

If you want a lower price, just go to ANY other dealer & find an equal or better vehicle & negotiate away. There are plenty of dealers that will give you a much better deal by accepting less profit.

2006-12-01 12:36:10 · answer #1 · answered by Vicky 7 · 3 0

If you purchase a car from these types of dealers, you should get a stipulation in the contract saying that if there is a car of the same make and model, year that has similar features and they discount the car from the price of the same type car that you purchased, that you should be able to get the difference in price.
That would be unlikely to happen because all USED cars are not the same even if they are the same year and model. There is always something different. And if it is no hassle/no haggle then the price is the only price. Usually in that cause they would sell the car to another dealer if they couldn't unload it. That way they do not have to discount it. The Price you see, is the price you pay.

2006-12-04 02:16:21 · answer #2 · answered by ? 7 · 0 0

Being incorrect is in lots of cases a getting to understand journey (or it could be). frequently, you could learn extra via being incorrect than you'll be from being suited. unusual how maximum religions look to think of that existence isn't a getting to understand journey and that some form of eternal existence is the "cost" for being suited or incorrect.

2016-12-14 10:42:14 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers