Extended Warranties for New Cars

Padding the Auto Dealer's Pockets

By Linda Ann Nickerson, published Aug 31, 2007
Published Content: 773  Total Views: 282,003  Favorited By: 124 CPs
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You could probably write this script yourself. Maybe you're lived it.

Suppose you have scraped together enough cash to pop for a brand-new car. You step inside the automotive dealership and begin browsing. Immediately, the sales staff begins closing in, like hyenas surrounding their prey. They circle, seemingly unnoticed, until one pounces upon you, invading your personal space.

"May I help you?" he sweetly asks.

"Yeah, right," you mutter to yourself. "How about I just lay my retirement savings on the altar?'

Out loud, you clear your throat and reply, "I'm looking for a no-frills, basic commuter car."

"I have just the thing," the salesman chirps. "Wanna take a test drive?"

Within twenty minutes, you and he are seated in a glass cubicle, hashing out options and pricing. The salesman excuses himself several times, presumably to run deep discount prices by his manager.

Finally, when you have all but waived your own rights to your eternal inheritance, the salesman swoops in for the kill. "Did you want an extended warranty?"

Unnecessary Add-Ons

Extended car warranties are a rip-off for many reasons. This is an additional way for car dealers to bump up the price of your vehicle, just when you think you have finished negotiating with the sales team, and you think you have made a solid deal.

Basic Logic

By now, you have heard the whole spiel. You may have bought into the advertising claims of safety, durability, and reliability of the vehicle. If the car is all it's cracked up to be, will you really need an extra insurance policy for breakdowns?

The manufacturer automatically offers a basic warranty package. This may cover any number of variables for anything from 3-10 years (or from 30,000 to 100,000 miles).

By that time, won't the dealer really want to sell you a new car anyway?

Extended Warranty Snags

First, by the time you finish paying for an added warranty, you have increased your monthly payments significantly. You would be better off to put more cash down, up front. That would lower your payments. Perhaps you could opt for a shorter term of payment.

Extended Warranties for New Cars

If your spiffy new sports car is a quality vehicle, will you really need an extended warranty?

Credit: Classroom Clipart

Copyright: http://classroomclipart.com

Takeaways
  • If the car is all it's cracked up to be, will you really need an insurance policy for breakdowns?
  • How long do you plan to keep the new vehicle?
  • Read the small print. Extended warranties contain plenty of exclusions!
Comments
Showing Comments 1 - 3 of 3
 
 
Great article...

Posted on 09/03/2007 at 10:09:00 AM

 
Good advice.

Posted on 09/03/2007 at 2:09:00 AM

 
Thanks for sharing.

Posted on 09/02/2007 at 4:09:00 PM

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