You can find it in the order guide here Official 2018 Jeep Wrangler Unlimited Order Guide (4-Door JLU - U.S.). Order bank is open!, or you can ask the dealer for a POC that shows the FWP price. That is the invoice price. It will show for each option and the total.Just how do you find invoice?
You can find it here...Just how do you find invoice?
Your posts are always perceptive . My guess is that the dealer makes a profit of about 20% of MSRP , and FCA makes about 30% of MSRP , so the actual manufacturing cost value is 50% of MSRP , including corporate costs . The whole invoice business is a fake marketing ploy . So , I always just give them my offer in writing . ( I must write because I am disabled and deaf .)Don't be rude or a jerk about it. They’re going to know you purchase elsewhere when you take it in for service. Showing them that you saved a good amount of money lets them know you had a good reason to. Possibly encourage them to be more competitive in pricing. Probably not, it it could.
How does 10% off MSRP compare to 6.5% off invoice anyway?
This has been answered a few times. There are a lot of ways a dealer can make money selling below invoice:Im new to this forum and looking to buy my first Jeep. Reading this blog has me curious...... How does a dealer make any money selling for "below invoice" ? And why would they want to even go that low? Obviously ive heard of dealers selling cars at invoice or maybe $500 over invoice, but never below invoice. Can someone explain how this works with jeeps?
Thank you for clarifying!This has been answered a few times. There are a lot of ways a dealer can make money selling below invoice:
- The dealers have a holdback of roughly 3% of the invoice price. So their true cost for the vehicle is 3% below invoice
- Dealer doc fees are basically pure profit
- Dealers get incentives from the factory that are not known to the public. These can be regional incentives on particular vehicles, or sales thresholds where the factory gives bonuses on every sale
- Dealers use sold (factory) orders to pump up their numbers which gives them more stock for the lot and access to more special edition vehicles. Those vehicles sell at higher margins
- There is some kind of fleet program that has factory support that allows them to sell at lower prices
- Other stuff we don't know about
Simply , "invoice" is far above what the dealers owe for the vehicle . Giving you a price "below invoice" is another way of saying they are making gross revenue of 20% over what they paid .Im new to this forum and looking to buy my first Jeep. Reading this blog has me curious...... How does a dealer make any money selling for "below invoice" ? And why would they want to even go that low? Obviously ive heard of dealers selling cars at invoice or maybe $500 over invoice, but never below invoice. Can someone explain how this works with jeeps?
Selling like crazy !!Simply , "invoice" is far above what the dealers owe for the vehicle . Giving you a price "below invoice" is another way of saying they are making gross revenue of 20% over what they paid .
If a vehicle is 100K , the dealer owes 75K . If "invoice" is 96K . Dealer sells it to you for 95K , "below invoice" . Dealer still makes gross revenue 20K . Think Porsche .
The more expensive , the bigger the spread , because the bigger risk for a dealer to sell a super-expensive vehicle , think Aston-Martin or Ferrari .
"Invoice" is a fake marketing tool ; the buyer is not getting anything below dealer cost , and never will . That would be impossible . It's a business , with partners , all making money .
To give you an idea of the numbers involved : FCA just published first quarter Revenue of Euros 25 Billion , and Profit of US $ 1.24 Billion . And that is only the first three months of the year . My guess is that each of about 4,000 dealers worldwide has about over US $ 1 Million gross revenue over three months . After all the expenses , that would leave maybe $ 200,000 profit for the dealership . It's a business .
Selling like crazy !!
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Yep , if you look at the dealer's overhead in personnel , office workers , paying interest on finance loans from manufacturer's credit agency to have the inventory in the first place , land cost or rent , payroll , advertising , taxes , etc .... then HOW could the fake "invoice" price be real ? It is Impossible .Wow, I did not realize from all my years of buying cars that the invoice listed on Kelley blue book or Edmunds, for example , was not the actual invoice price that the dealer paid for the car.