This blog post originally ran five years ago. It’s important that I run it again today because
violation of this Federal law, especially its intent, which is to inform
car buyers of the official retail price suggested by the car manufacturer, is
rampant by most car dealers. The US Senator who drafted this law, Mike Maroney,
said this about his law, “The dealer who
is honest about the so-called ‘list price’ cannot compete with the one who
‘packs’ several hundred dollars extra into it so he can pretend to give you
more on the trade-in.” Senator Monroney said this in 1958 and the only
thing that has changed is that dishonest dealers are now charging several thousand
dollars extra. As I write this, the national average price of a gallon of gas
is over $4 and climbing. Car dealers are marking up fuel efficient cars,
especially, hybrids by thousands of dollars. They add their dealer window sticker, identical in
style to the Monroney label right next to it so that it’s virtually
indistinguishable. Then, to add insult to injury, they remove the both labels
before delivery which is illegal.
“Phony
Monroney” should not be confused with “Boney Maroney” (I got a gal named Boney Maroney. She’s as skinny as a stick of macaroni).
That song was first recorded by Larry Williams during my high school years,
1956-1958. You will appreciate this lame attempt at humor only if you are about
my age, 66.
The
Monroney label is the window sticker that is mandated by federal law to be
affixed to every new vehicle sold in the United States up until the time the
new owner takes delivery. The name, Monroney, derives from Senator Michael
Monroney’s law passed by Congress in 1958. Prior to the proposal of this bill,
there was often a large discrepancy between the showroom price and the actual
price of a new vehicle. The fact was that existing price tags did not
tell the full story. Most customer-quoted prices were for
"stripped-down" models and did not include additions for preparation
charges, freight charges, federal, state, and local taxes, or optional
factory-installed equipment requested by the purchaser. These hidden charges
were used by some dealers to increase the selling price while giving the new
vehicle buyer an inflated idea of their trade-in allowance. This price
confusion led to a slump in auto sales during the early 1950's. Senator
Monroney's bill was designed to prevent the abuse of the new vehicle list prices,
but would not, however, prevent dealers and buyers from bargaining over vehicle
prices.
Well,
as you might expect, car dealers have figured out a way to evade this very good
law. An alarmingly large number of dealers use a label that is designed to look
almost identical to the official Monroney label. It has the same coloring,
fonts, type size and layout. This “phony Monroney” is affixed right next to the
genuine article. Unless you really look close and read all of the fine print,
you will have no idea that you are looking at a counterfeit Monroney label.
This phony Monroney includes extra charges to artificially inflate the
manufacturer’s suggested list price, MSRP.
One
of the most egregious of these charges is an addition of pure markup just for
profit which has a variety of names. Some of these are “Market Adjustment”,
“Additional Dealer Markup”, “Adjusted Market Value”, “ADM”, “Market Adjustment
Addendum” and “Market Value Adjustment”. This is simply an amount that the
dealer adds to the manufacturer’s suggested retail price. It is virtually
always used in high-demand, low supply cars. I have seen these labels with
charges as much as $10,000 added to the MSRP. Additions of $1,500 to $3,995 are
common. Dealers also use the counterfeit labels to price dealer-installed
accessories, which are OK, as long as the accessories are not marked up higher
than the manufacturer marks them up.
When
customers confuse the phony Monroney with the real one, this distorts their
point of reference for comparing prices between different dealerships. One
manufacturer’s Monroney labels are consistent. A 2007 Honda Accord with the
same factory accessories will have the same MSRP at every Honda dealership you
visit. But if dealers fool you into thinking their label is part of the Monroney,
you are not comparing “apples and apples”.
This can adversely affect a good buying decision in a number of ways.
Some buyers focus mainly on how big a trade-in allowance they can get for their
old car. If one dealer has the same car marked up $3,000 more than another
dealer, he can offer you $3,000 more for your trade and still make the same
profit as the other dealer. Some buyers focus on how big a discount they get
from “sticker”. It’s easy to give a higher discount if you have artificially inflated
the MSRP by thousands of dollars.
My
advice to you is carefully inspect the sticker on the new car you are
contemplating buying. Read it completely and especially the fine print. If
there is a second label on the car, it is possible that it is fair. This would
be for purposes of adding an item, installed by the dealer like floor mats or
stripes, priced the same as the manufacturer charges. If that second label
includes a markup over MSRP for no reason other than profit for the dealer,
make sure that you adjust for that number in your comparisons for discounts and
trade-in allowance. Some dealers also add a second markup to these labels and
that is the infamous “dealer fee” also sometimes called “doc fee” and “dealer
prep”. Some dealers do not put this on the phony Monroney but print it on their
buyer’s orders and program it into their computers.
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