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Hyundai Santa Fe Prices Paid and Buying Experience

2635 messages, Last post on Nov 28, 2009 at 3:41 PM
You are in the Prices Paid: Buying & Leasing Experiences Forum. Your Hosts are car_man & kyfdx
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Well, I can't thank everyone for all of the help these forums provided. Sealing the deal tomorrow on a new Santa Fe SE FWD w/ Premium pkg, Floor Mats and Cargo Tray. Here are the details: MSRP: $26,210 Invoice: $25,016(Includes Freight & $150 Add fee) Negotiated SubTotal: $23,900 ($22,400 w/$1500 in rebates) NY Tax: $2,061.38 Tire Tax: $12.50 Ins Fee: $10.00 Dealer Fee: $45.00 SubTotal: $26,028.88 Rebate: $1,500.00 Total Due on delivery: $24,528.88 Thanks again for all the help! |
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We purchased a AWD Santa Fe limited from a Hyundai Dealer from Nanuet New York. They are nice and smooth to deal with. The car comes with sunroof and I was forced to buy the floor mat, first aid kit, and cargo net at insane price. But that was Hyundai's fault not the dealer. MSRP is 29955, Invoice is 28116 When I went , I just said that I do not care about the rebate, just tell me your bottomline price with 0% from Hyundai. The deal I got is 26495 + tax (about 1.3 K) + Title ($140 including documentation and doing the title for me) with 0% for 36 months. The thing that sealed the deal was they take a 11K trade-in for my Mazda tribute while the other two dealer I went to in New Jersery only offered 9K. Plus that I dont pay tax on this portion of the new car, My true saving is about 12K, which is about the same price as the private party price of my tribute on KBB. So every thing went very smoothly. Before we signed the paper, they suddenly add a 295 dollar preparation fee for the vehicle. I was told normally they charge 500 dollar for the preparation. At the time, the wife was too tired to argue. So we paid the fee. But is that normal? We purchased new car in the south before, we were never charged with this fee. Anyway, I think we got a decent deal, just feel uncomfortable with the prep fee. Any thought?
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here is south Minnesota. I am looking for Santa Fe SE AWD with no option and package. If I pay $24,000 as a OTD price, is it good deal? What is reasonable number for Santa Fe SE AWD with nothing? Thank you so much in advance
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Replying to: hoo320 (Jul 29, 2007 7:21 pm)
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Replying to: soogiang (Jul 29, 2007 7:41 pm) |
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Hi all - I think we are getting a great deal, but wanted to run this by the rest of you to get your input. I want to make sure we aren't missing anything. What we are buying in Dallas area: Santa Fe - Limited 2WD with Touring Package (does not include Premium Package) The current price we have is $23,750. That includes the rebate and the $500 financing incentive. This price seems amazing to me. To find a limited with touring without the premium package seems hard to do. The dealer we are dealing with didn't have any on the lot and is getting it from another dealer. I am also a bit worried b/c we really want the 3rd row of seating and I read in the other forum that the 2008 will not have that option. Can anyone back that up? We are in no rush to buy, but if the 2008 model will not have the option of 3rd row seating then we are in more of a rush. Thanks! Sharon
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Replying to: slateblue (Jul 30, 2007 8:46 am) But overall, what do you think about the deal.
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There are many here who are asking whether or not the deal they're getting on a new Santa Fe is a good one, often without posting enough information. In other cases, they're asking after they've bought the car. (What's the point of checking after the fact?) In still other cases, folks are saying things like, "I can buy a SF with Package X for $XX,XXX. Is this a good deal?" In these cases, neither the M.S.R.P. nor the invoice price is provided so anyone wanting to respond needs to do research that the would-be buyer should have already done. IMO the best way to determine whether or not your purchase price is reasonable is to compare it to the dealer invoice price (not to sticker). This very web site (Edmunds.com) provides this info and it's very accurate. One need only go to "New Cars" and configure a Santa Fe exactly like the one they're dealing on, including all options. In evaluating a deal, the only comparison that matters is purchase price (including "dealer fees", if any, but not including rebates, taxes, or registration). In today's market, it's easy to buy at $500 - $1000 under the invoice price. If invoice is $25,000, a good deal is $24,500 or less. Any rebates should be subtracted from that amount; taxes and license should be added. It's that simple. |
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Replying to: hoo320 (Jul 30, 2007 9:18 am) |
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Replying to: mpuzach (Jul 30, 2007 9:31 am)
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