It is almost impossible for you
to determine the true cost of a new car. This might sound crazy, but many dealers
don’t know the true cost of their cars. The manufacturers and distributors
invoice their dealers for an amount when they ship them a car that is almost
always several hundreds of dollars more than the true cost. It’s fair to say
that in virtually every case the “invoice” for a new car is much higher than
the true cost. By true cost, I am referring to cost as defined by GAAP, generally
accepted accounting principals.
You probably have heard about
“holdback”. That is an amount of money added into the invoice of a car ranging
from 1% to 3% of the MSRP which is returned to the dealer after he has paid the
invoice. Some manufacturers include the cost of regional advertising in the
invoice which offsets the dealer’s advertising costs. Another fairly common
charge included in invoices is “floor plan assistance”. This goes to offset the
dealer’s cost of financing the new cars in his inventory. Another is “PDI” or
pre-delivery expense which reimbursed the dealer for preparing the car for
delivery to you. I could name several more, depending on the manufacturer or
distributor. Some of these monies that are returned to the dealer are not shown
as profit on his financial statement and some are. Technically a dealer could
say that the cost he showed you reflected all of the profit (by definition of
his financial statement), but the fact would remain that more money would come
to back to him after he sold you the car. To me, that’s called profit.
Besides holdbacks and
reimbursements for expenses, you must contend with customer and dealer
incentives when trying to figure out the cost of that new car. You will
probably be aware of the customer incentives, but not the dealer incentives.
Most dealers prefer and lobby the manufacturers for dealer rather than customer
incentives just for that reason. Also, performance incentives are paid to
dealers for selling a certain number of cars during a given time frame. These
usually expire at the end of a month and are one reason why it really is smart
to buy a new car on the last day of the month.
Last but not least, remember the
“dealer fee”, “dealer prep fee”, “doc fee”, “dealer inspection fee”, etc. which
is added to the price you were quoted by the salesman.. It is printed on the
buyer’s order and is lumped into the real fees such as Florida sales tax and
tag and registration fees. Most dealers in Florida (it is illegal in many
states) charge this fee which ranges from $500 to $1,000. If you are making
your buying decision on your perceived cost of the car, even if you were right,
here is up to $1,000 more in profit to the dealer.
Hopefully you can now understand
why it is virtually impossible to precisely know the cost of the new car you
are contemplating buying. Most often the salesman and sales manager is not
completely versed on the cost either. Checking the cost on a good Internet site
like www.kbb.com or www.edmunds.com is about the best you can
do. Consumer Reports is another good
source. One reason that Internet sites don’t always have the right invoice
price is that different distributors for cars invoice their dealers at
different prices.
Do not make a decision to buy a
car because the dealer has agreed to sell it to you for “X dollars above his
cost/invoice”. This statement is virtually meaningless. As I have advised you
in an earlier column, you can only be assured of getting the best price by
shopping several dealers for the exact same car and getting an “out the door”
price plus tax and tag only.
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