Getting the best deal on a car ( slight tongue in cheek )

You walk into the car dealer, the salespersons not sitting at his desk, but the mandotory framed picture of him and the kids is placed on his desk.
You don't go by the photo, it was probably taken when he went to impress the inlaws at a christening 10 years ago.
Ah, you breath a sigh of relief - he's a good decent family man with concience, pride and a dutiful husband and parent.

Maybe is is, and I apologise to those who are!

Go prepared, sandwiches for lunch and a book to read whilst he goes out the back to "speak with the Manager". If it's a decent Dealer, they'll have coffee on tap, so the Thermos isn't really necessary.

You look round and finally come to the car you really like. Let the bargaining begin !
Then it's not "How much do you want to pay"?, but "How much can you afford a month"?
Maybe a sensible and reasonable price is established on the purchase, but then you come to introduce your old car to him.
"I could do more if it were black, if it had 200 miles less on the clock, had a rear seat ashtray, on-board plasma/DVD player" etc.

Thing is, he's doing his job, but you are the customer and you want the best deal possible. For them, to sell the car at an acceptable profit for their company is OK. For you, what you pay is what you can afford, what you ideally want etc.

Remember - YOU ARE IN THE DRIVING SEAT - don't budge and when he says "final deal", and you still don't like it, close the bargaining down and say you'll have to go and think about it.
He knows that should you leave on that sentence, the chances of coming back are almost zero.

So it's a waiting game and one pack of sandwiches may not be enough.

If you finally get WHAT YOU WANT and are happy, watch out for the payment schemes . Any scheme they offer will be on a commission basis (fair enough) and regardless of the much better deal the Bank gave you yesterday - his will have some trimming and so much better in the long run.

Study car loans carefully and spend as much time possible searching for the best one. On a £10,000 car, this could have savings up to £5/700 or more at the end of it.


Nice Family Car
(6 kids and 2 dogs)
One lady owner
(18 year old binge drinker)
Low Mileage (speedometer broken)
Good Engine
(it has one)
MOT
(runs out next week)
Nice Radio
(stuck at RAP FM)
Good Heater
(hole in floor)
£400 ono
(will take a hundred quid cash)
FOR SALE

Online discounts at Direct Line

BEST POSSIBLE BUYING PRICE - BEST PART EXCHANGE DEAL - BEST SERVICE - BEST WARRANTRY - BEST FINANCES

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“Like you're in the showroom, about to either buy that car or walk out, and they're the salesman, saying "What do I have to say to get you in this car?"” Bill Maher

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