Pre Owned Pricing
Hi...first time poster here, but I have been lurking for a while.
I have found several older posts about price vs MSRP on new boxsters (5% off seems to be good, 10% off is extraordinary, but the dealer's willingness to bargain depends a lot based on the time of year). I'm wondering how flexible dealers are on their Certified Pre Owned pricing. Anybody have experience with that? Or do they try to stick to the asking price? I was looking at some of the CPO Boxsters from the Porsche website, and their prices seemed really high, so I wonder if they leave room to bargain. For example, they have a 2006 S with 5505 miles on it for $59,997, which is $457 more than a new 2007 priced out with the identical options. Joe Cary, NC |
Hi Joe, are you sure about your last sentance? That does not appear to be correct.
Although, some 2006 options cost more than they did for the 2007 (paint colors for example). What color is the car? Plus, the warranty cost $$ too. |
If you are going to spend $59K, might as well buy new and get exactly what you want. I bought my car used, but not at a Porsche dealer, seems like I got a better price doing that.
I bought a 2005 Boxster S with only 300 miles on it for $51K last Spring. Same car new was over $60K. It was at a Chrysler dealer. If you are buying a 987 model (2005 or newer), you don't really need the certification, since it will still be under warranty any how. Just have the car inspected at a Porsche dealer before you pull the trigger. Time of year does play a role as well. |
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The problem with used cars is that it's very hard to compare inventory at competing dealers as each used car comes with its own story. Much simpler with new cars (not demos). Just blanket the dealers in a 200 mile radius with a "Request for Quote" on a desired car (color, options) and see what they come back with. Let the market speak to you. Anything you'll hear on this forum will be customer/region/season-specific and not necessarily applicable to your situation. Z. |
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I didn't make that stuff up! It came up on on the preowned search from the Porsche website at Rusnak/Westlake in CA. I pasted the info below. Don't worry about my sanity, I wouldn't consider buying a used car for more than a new one, but I just wonder why would they would even ask so much it in the first place. Maybe they need a lot of wiggle room built into the price. If I'm going to drop 60k, I'm going to get exactly what I want!
Joe 2006 Porsche Boxster S, $ 59,997 Porsche Approved Certified Pre-Owned Vehicle Save vehicle Car data Displacement: 3.2 liters Power Output: 280 HP Drive Type: 2-WD Transmission: Manual Color: Black Vehicle Ident Number: WP0CB29886U730073 Color (Interior): Sand Beige Standard Leather Mileage: 5,505 Miles Year: 2006 Price: $ 59,997 Installed Options * 18 inch Boxster S wheel * BOSEŽ Surround Sound System * Bi-Xenon Headlamp Package * Heated Front Seats * Porsche Crest in Headrest * Porsche Windstop (Deflector) * Self-Dim Mirrors & Rain Sensors * Wheel caps with Colored Crest |
Most Porsche dealers will deal on the CPO cars but in the end, you will still pay about $5K over what you would pay to a private party for the same car.
Whether this is "worth it" to you depends on many factors. In this case, new seems like a better way to go. Nothing that the dealers do in the area of pricing surprises me. They have quite an attitude about themselves. Good luck. |
With regard to that particular car, it's currently priced at $48,877 which is obviously closer to what one would expect. The prices for preowned vehicles on Porsche's website are not updated to reflect dealer actions and I'd imagine are stale across the board. Amusingly, it's also managed to shed a few miles off the odometer.
Porsche Pre-owned Price Current Price |
The CPO costs the dealer
around $1500-1600 to Porsche and 2 hours labor at his cost on a car with this few miles.
Dealers prices are typically $3k higher than private and dealers typically ask $3500-4000 more for the CPO. So that means you'd be paying at least $6500-7000 or so more for the privledge of buying this dealer's car. Why would you do that when www.cars.com lists at least a dozen 2006 S cars with less than 10k miles for less than $50k. And with 3 years worth of warranty left, the value of the CPO diminishes because your lifestyle may change and you may not own this car 3 years from now. Does happen. Do lots of research on comparable cars, know what the market really is, be prepared to show the dealer why your offer is reasonable, be prepared to walk out if they don't agree. If they have your phone number, they will call. There are dozens of Porsches just like you want out there, the trick is to find the right one and a motivated seller. P-cars are what I call lifestyle cars and people's lives change (kids, marriage, divorce, house, illness, retirement, etc) so many good ones come on the market. Don't fall in love with this one, there is a better one just down the street. If I were buying, I'd wait till winter as the bargains are always the best from a private party in the winter when there are no buyers lining up at his door. He has to sell (for whatever reason) and that provides the motivation to set a reasonable price. Following this sort of strategy, I've never failed to pay $3k less than the private party market price for my 2 Boxsters. |
That seems like a much better deal now...I wonder if the first price was a typo. Thanks for all the insight on pricing.
Joe |
Joe,
Were you planning to drive it home if you bought it? You'd almost add 50% to the mileage. But it would be fun. :D Do you work for SAS Inst? Terry |
I was surfing the preowned cars on the Porsche site, and I was just bringing that one up as an example of pricing that made no sense ($60k for a used one, WTF?) I'm interested in a preowned Boxster, but at a better price! Now that you bring it up, the idea of a cross country road trip sounds pretty good! But then you'd ahve all those bugs on the bumper to scrape off...
I dont work for SAS, but they are just around the corner from me here in Cary. The guy who is the head of SAS owns the country club I belong to. Joe |
Jim Goodnight probably owns a lot of stuff in Cary. I support 400 SAS users at the place I collect my paychecks. Great software. Tell Jim hello when you see him on the back 9. ;)
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Yeah, Jim Goodnight owns a lot of this town. I don't know him, but I have heard he's very nice. Maybe I have been sucking up to the wrong people...
Joe |
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