Iawrangler
Member
I agree with your analogy. I bought a new '24 2 Door Sport in Aug '24 the only options being anvil color and auto trans. Your post inspired me to look it up on KBB. They show the current private sale value to be in the range of what I paid.Fully loaded is the problem. I sold a 23 Sport a couple of months ago for $500 less than I paid for it after 20 months and 5700 miles. It was a base Jeep I paid $32k for ordered new. When selling real estate or cars it’s all about the comps. You want the cheapest house in a nice neighborhood, not a mansion in a trailer park.
Jeep inflated their prices by adding options, not increasing the base prices. So adjusted for inflation, a base Sport is actually a pretty good deal. However, add model upgrades and options on top of that and you go from 30k to 60k on the exact same vehicle.
I’ve owned 62 vehicles in my life and I’m not wealthy. I build relationships with dealers, order below invoice, wait for the best incentives, and choose base models in whatever I choose. So base Sport or base Rubicon so I’ll be the cheapest guy on the block.
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