larrymg1
Registered Member
- Joined
- May 26, 2015
- Messages
- 708
- Reaction score
- 201
- Points
- 43
- Location
- Lexington South Carolina
- Genesis Model Type
- Genesis G80 Sport
the salesmen have no interest in trying to earn my business, I am not an easy target or an easy sale, so they walk away. Another reason why several manufacturers will likely never again see business from me.
While this seems to be a dealer dependent behavior, it is becoming more and more apparent at more and more dealerships, Hyundai/Genesis is no exception. I walked out of 2 Hyundai/Genesis dealership because of this behavior.
Name a brand and I probably walked out of a dealership over the years. I've had a couple of OK transactions but none great. Twice I've walked into a showroom, saw the car I wanted, had a price in mind to buy, but never got that far.
Twice I had the last laugh though. Went to a dealer, offered a price and it was refused. Left the showroom, went to another dealer and bought the same day. Next day they call to accept my offer. Sorry, too late.
Easiest buy was my previous Genesis. Had a price from TrueCar in an email. Dealer quickly matched it when his offer did not fly.
That might apply to some Acura and Lexus dealers, but I don't believe it applies to all of them. And even so, I don't think their "no haggle" price is always MSRP, but obviously could be on some models depending on supply vs demand.Acura and Lexus have gone to "no haggle" pricing, the price on the sticker is what you pay end of story, they will not negotiate, therefore they lost my business.
That might apply to some Acura and Lexus dealers, but I don't believe it applies to all of them. And even so, I don't think their "no haggle" price is always MSRP, but obviously could be on some models depending on supply vs demand.
It's region specific for Lexus, not sure about Acura, but all Southern California Lexus Dealers are on the "no haggle" (Lexus calls it the Lexus Plus Experience) and yes it is MSRP pricing.. in some cases higher than MSRP because of dealer add-ons or the every famous "market adjustment" fee.
8 of the local Lexus dealerships to me (which extends about 150 miles in each direction) all have $10K mark-ups on the new LC500 and LS500, no haggle price is MSRP + $10K "market adjustment"
personally haven't bought a BMW or MBZ in 10ish years, but I know the local Porsche, Audi, BMW dealer near me is flexible on pricing, a buddy bought a 2017 Panamera 4s there and he is a negotiating god, he never pays retail for anything, I've seen this guy task Costco on a 65" TV and get a deal on it.What about the pricing flexibility of Mercedes Benz and BMW dealers? No haggling too?
In the case of the specific Acura and Lexus models you cited, the fact it is only for those models (and maybe a few other) proves what I said that there is no brand level policy of no haggle pricing at MSRP for those two brands. Cars where demand outstrips supply are obviously going to demand premium prices.It's region specific for Lexus, not sure about Acura, but all Southern California Lexus Dealers are on the "no haggle" (Lexus calls it the Lexus Plus Experience) and yes it is MSRP pricing.. in some cases higher than MSRP because of dealer add-ons or the every famous "market adjustment" fee.
8 of the local Lexus dealerships to me (which extends about 150 miles in each direction) all have $10K mark-ups on the new LC500 and LS500, no haggle price is MSRP + $10K "market adjustment"
As for Acura I was also looking at the RLX Sport-Hybrid while cross shopping the G80, and again all the dealers around me for about 150 miles in all directions (Ventura to Riverside to San Diego) would not budge on their "no haggle" pricing. I saw dealerships online in other states offering the same car same features same build for $51-$53K and the dealerships around me were stuck on $64K for the car, and would not budge. Several of the dealerships didn't even have any RLX models in inventory and flat out refused to honor the $8K rebate from Acura on it because it "applied to in stock vehicles only" and they didn't stock the RLX because it is a low volume seller.
I don't believe that, unless it was a floor sample.I've seen this guy task Costco on a 65" TV and get a deal on it.
In the case of the specific Acura and Lexus models you cited, the fact it is only for those models (and maybe a few other) proves what I said that there is no brand level policy of no haggle pricing at MSRP for those two brands. Cars where demand outstrips supply are obviously going to demand premium prices.
The last brand that I recall have no-haggle prices across the board was Saturn, and I think they gave that up shortly before GM closed them down. There may be been others besides Saturn, but I am pretty sure that Acura and Lexus allow dealers to haggle and sell below MSRP if the dealer wants to do that. At the dealer level, dealers can do what they want to, since they are not owned by the manufacturer and are independent businesses (unless it says in the franchise agreement that they must have no haggle prices).
A lot of stores have price matching guarantees.as for the Costco thing, all I can say is try it, yes Costco will negotiate on certain high dollar items if you talk to management, so does Best Buy and Sears on appliances..
Yes, I have heard about that. But that doesn't mean the no haggle price is the same as the MSRP at locations that don't have no haggle pricing. That was my point.Lexus has no haggle pricing in specific regions, it is called the "Lexus Plus Experience" it is a thing and has been in place for 2 years. in high volume areas like Los Angeles, San Fran, NYC, Florida, they use this tactic.