See, our dealerships here are not shy about advertising the prices with clearly stated mark-ups, so they usually don't run afoul of those rules.But you do have laws yeah…..that say if they advertise a car with a VIN number they have to sell at said advertised price?
I would argue they could do similar to Aus.
On the car build, you build your car and a unique VIN could be given with price.
Sure you would still have to go to the dealer to pay and pick up just like we do…but if the price has been advertised through head office with a VIN then they would have to sell it at that price.
Here in Aus they don’t need to advertise the exact car, so no vin needed…just the Z
Once it’s priced and advertised, that's it. It’s what it sells for
I just find the situation ridiculous…but you already know that![]()
Man just let me in the country and vote me in to parliament …I’m readySee, our dealerships here are not shy about advertising the prices with clearly stated mark-ups, so they usually don't run afoul of those rules.
Hold up, they gave you a price and you put a deposit down but they can still change the price when the car arrives?Yesterday I visited my Nissan dealer that I placed a deposit for a Z Proto at MSRP or a Sport or Performance again at MSRP.
I would happy ordering a Z in a different color like white with the bronze wheels like on the Proto , but no . Now I have to see if they sell me a performance at MSRP which is what my deposit is written up as
But it isn't just Nissan doing this. Chevrolet, Ford, Stellantis, Toyota, everyone. They all do it! Buyers really don't have a choice other than dealer shopping hoping to find an ethical one. The majority of buys won't even do that as they think all dealers are the same.Well maybe they stop franchising if those franchisers can not be trusted to do the right thing.
There has to be ways of doing things that won’t harm their business model, otherwise ultimately their business will go bust ( as it’s already in financial trouble not hard to imagine) and there will be no more Nissan full stop
I don't expect the dealers to help, but I do expect the manufacturers to do something to curb this shit, at the very least to keep a positive brand image.Dealership service departments also soften the blow of defective vehicles, arranging loaner vehicles, making repairs, dealing with pissed off customers.....
So, dealerships do provide value to a manufacturer. Besides, when manufacturers are making way less vehicles than usual and selling every single one without incentives, why would they try to help the customer?
We all have a short attention span anyway. Look at our politicians, every single one a crook, caught on tape, and yet we cheer them on. Why should manufacturers be worried? We'll be wooed by the next "thing" anyways.....