TheRaven
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Oct 22, 2020
- Threads
- 6
- Messages
- 2,844
- Reaction score
- 4,176
- Location
- Reading, Pennsylvania
- Vehicle(s)
- Sold
I am very similar to you - friends and family call me to go car shopping with them so as a result I have far too much experience with it. And frankly i'm getting tired of doing it even for myself. But I can't remember the last time I was able to get close to the supposed KBB value for a trade. One of the big problems I face is that i'm almost always seeking out a very specific build or a very rare version that only one or maybe two dealers have. So I don't often have the luxury of ACTUALLY walking...I have to make the dealer believe that I have other options even though I don't.Everybody has different experiences with this and I'm definitely not saying you are wrong. Just from my own personal experience (both on my own vehicles and helping out several friends or family members when buying new or used vehicles from a dealership) both the trade-in values and the vehicles they were selling had comparable prices to what many search engines and other websites had listed. Granted they will always start out with offering you less for the trade-in and more for the vehicle you want to buy but some quick negotiations usually brings the offers within reason....and if not I just walk out. The biggest thing you need to keep in mind that the condition of the vehicle they want to trade-in makes a difference, and everybody thinks that THEIR vehicle should be in the 100% perfect and excellent shape category. The difference between "excellent" and "good" condition trade-in can be thousands of dollars. The reason friends and family often ask me to check out a vehicle on the lot, especially a used on for sale, is that I'm a "car guy" and can identify a lot of potential issues and determine the overall condition of the car by inspecting it and a test drive (I don't claim to be an ASE certified mechanic but worked in the automotive engineering and testing field for years and car have been a hobby since I was a kid). I can't count how many times people I know think their car is "excellent" but I have to tell them it's really not.
I will also say that most of my experience was all pre-Covid so things may have changed, though I have been involved in the purchase of 2 vehicles since.
And you and I both know there is no such thing as an "excellent" trade. If it's like new, it's "good" condition. Anything less is "fair" condition. My personal cars are pristine, I get compliments from amazed dealers every single time I go shopping...but I value even my own cars at "good" condition and then subtract at least $2k from the online estimate.
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