kltk1
Senior Member
OK, hoping folks could help out here. I learned something the other day I wasn't aware of. I was looking at a vehicle in North Carolina. They have a $2000 southeast rebate, whereas where I live in the northeast it's only $1000. Or something on that order, my numbers may be a bit skewed. In the end the southeast rebate was about $1000 more than the northeast. Meaning, if I buy the NC vehicle, northeast rebates would apply as I'm not a southeast resident.
All that said, the discounted price on a truck here was MSRP minus 12.7% BEFORE rebates. The southeast vehicle coming in at a 12% discount, and I'm sure if I pushed a bit the southeast dealer would have met the 12.7%. My question is, I see a lot of people mentioning they were able to get 20%, or more, off of MSRP. I can only assume that 20% includes all rebates. Can anyone confirm 12-13% off BEFORE rebates the norm? Because rebates fluctuate so much between regions it's hard to compare apples to apples with the differences in rebates. Thank you.
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All that said, the discounted price on a truck here was MSRP minus 12.7% BEFORE rebates. The southeast vehicle coming in at a 12% discount, and I'm sure if I pushed a bit the southeast dealer would have met the 12.7%. My question is, I see a lot of people mentioning they were able to get 20%, or more, off of MSRP. I can only assume that 20% includes all rebates. Can anyone confirm 12-13% off BEFORE rebates the norm? Because rebates fluctuate so much between regions it's hard to compare apples to apples with the differences in rebates. Thank you.
Sent from my SM-T350 using Tapatalk