As an early adopter, I own a 2015 Genesis Sedan 3.8 AWD...before it was rebranded with the G80.
I k ow hyundai does not honor the Genesis Velet service for the 2015s which pissed me off, but does anyone know if we can take our 2015 Genesis to a stand alone Genesis dealer for service. I have been taking it to the Hyundai dealer I bought it from and find their service subpar....are the 2015 owners excluded from the standalone genesis dealer service?
You purchased a Hyundai, not a Genesis.
The only model that offered valet service at that time was the Equus and the price reflected that (once the Genesis became the G80 and offered valet service, the price rose to reflect the added luxury service amenities).
You can certainly take your Genesis sedan to get it serviced at a stand alone Genesis dealer (as of right now, there are only a few), but likely warranty repairs will have to be done at a Hyundai dealership.
Many Lexus owners take their vehicle to a Toyota dealership for basic maintenance due to cost and there are even Lexus dealerships that will do basic maintenance on brands other than Toyota/Lexus, but of course, warranty work can only be done within brand.
There are good and bad Hyundai dealerships - may have to drive a bit further, but it seems that it would be worth it based on your experience.
The point is that all vehicle brands face the same laws/regulations when launching a new brand. Nobody kneecapped Genesis Motors.
Hyundai/Genesis is their own worst enemy, it would seem. If I sold Erniemobiles I would never prohibit ANYBODY who sells them for me from putting an Erniemobile sign outside. Yet that seems to be what Genesis did to Hyundai dealers. It’s KWAAAAAZZZZEEEE!
As EdP noted, the intial 150 or so Genesis dealership plan had to be scrapped due to certain states franchise dealership laws.
FCA was able to split off RAM into a separate brand because all Dodge dealerships were offered a RAM dealership (which is what ultimately happened - all Hyundai dealerships were offered an opportunity to get a Genesis franchise).
And even for brands that were already split at the start (as in the case of
Lincoln/Ford), certain state franchise laws prohibit automakers from placing undue burdens on dealerships, which is why FoMoCo hasn't been able to force
Lincoln franchisees to build-out separate
Lincoln dealerships in certain states.