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Hyundai Santa Fe Prices Paid and Buying Experience

2159 messages,  Last post on Sep 07, 2008 at 3:01 PM

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What is this discussion about? Hyundai Santa Fe, SUV


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#146 of 2159
The Whole Buying Experience. by davidkeith37
Sep 27, 2004 (9:39 pm)
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My 1978 Dodge Slant 6 B 100 Van has either 300,000 or 400,000 miles on it. Anyway while the obstinate beast refuses to die, it allways starts and runs even in 115* heat, it has come time to replace it. With no tradin and cash in hand, more on that later, I thought the model year end would be a good time to buy. A small 2wd SUV seemed to fit my needs best. I rated initial cost and gas economy as the two most important factors in the purchase decision. Gas is not likely to be much less than $2.00 a gallon from here on in my opinion. Narrowed the choice down to a Hyundai Santa Fe and a Mitsubishi Outlander. Had an internet offer of $17,529.07 out the door from Phoenix for a 2004 Santa Fe, 2.4L, MT and fwd. Thought the Mitsubishi worth a little more because of its higher horse power and torque so went to the Misubishi dealer in Tucson AZ and offered $800.00 more than the cost of the Santa Fe. Poor salesman was running back and forth into that little room where all the decisions are made but in the end would not come at all close to what I was willing to pay so left. I had two experiences with the Hyundai dealer in Tucson. First while wearing my old mans coveralls, sometimes called a jump suit, went into his Northside location. Maybe the beard had something to do with it too, but you have not been dismissed until you have be dised by a car salesman. They were not interested in me, ignored my questions and after a few minutes I left. Later I went to his East side location with his newspaper ad advertising a Santa Fe for about $15,500 base as I remember the ad. Was informed I did not meet the conditions in the fine print and besides after checking the SN I was informed that that one and only Santa Fe was somewhere else at a storage lot. So went to Phoenix and purchased a 2004 Hyundai Santa Fe, MT, 2.4L, and fwd. Base $15,644.07, Tax $1243.70, Title $4.00, Doc $299.00 and Lic $338.23. Total = $17,529.00. I did add a 100,000 mile warranty for $1,295.00 which I might not do again if I had it to do all over again. Anyway I think I got a deal and do recommend the Internet Fleet Sales at Pitre Hyundai in Scottsdale, Phoenix area, Arizona. By the way, I thought all I had to do to get money from a retirement account was to ask for it to get it transferred. No way, any large transaction has delays built into at every step of the way. In the end I had to become creative with the credit card, lean on friends and relatives and cry at the Credit Union. Anyway during the drama found out what the cost would have been if I had had to use the dealers credit. APR of 16.95%, finance charge of $9,214.60 and total cost of $ 29,788.60. I love the Santa Fe, first tank made 27.4 mpg. I do recommend the dealership and sales people at the above mentioned address, good people, good car, and good price.
#147 of 2159
Think we got a good deal? by dawnsatx
Oct 12, 2004 (6:11 am)
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We got a 3.5L V6 FWD for $21,022.94. This is after they applied a $1750 rebate and a $500 military discount. This included TT&L. Car tax in Texas is about 6.25% so I figure we got it for under $19500 before TT&L. The sticker price was about $23K+. It has the moonroof, woodgrain trim, ABS. Does not have the 6-disc CD changer.
 
This is in San Antonio, Texas.
#149 of 2159
under invoice by tooldogg
Nov 09, 2004 (12:15 am)
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Try www.townehyundai.com . They have santa fe's for $1200 under invoice. I brought their ad into my local dealership and he went 500 under with lifetime oil changes. not bad for an lx.
#150 of 2159
Good Selection & Pricing on 2004 - 4 cyl, Manual Trans. by tinman3
Nov 09, 2004 (3:53 pm)
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Hyundai stopped production of the 4 cyl Santa Fe base model about mid year. Don't know about the rest of the country, but here, in Arizona, most dealers have no inventory or have 1 in stock and not too interested in making a good deal. After checking around I found "BIG" Bell Road Automall in Phoenix, that had 14 in stock and was very willing to make a below invoice deal and then further reduce the price by whatever rebate applied. You do have to haggle a bit on dealer installed/added stuff, but they were pleasant and professional. Being able to drive away in a new Santa Fe for under $16,000 + tax&fees seems like a good deal to me. They probably are just as willing to get you a good price on the 6 cyl models if that's what interests you; they had about a 100 of those on the lot. Hope this helps someone, it's a great car.
#151 of 2159
Watch out for the guys in 'Finance' by skagwaypilot
Nov 14, 2004 (3:21 pm)
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Remember the 'NBC Dateline' program on purchasing a car some months ago? They focused on the activities of the dealers in extracting the last penny from a purchaser - especially if the person was inexperienced or trusting. I'll not go into all the details, but the sales contract that was presented for our signature did not reflect our conversations with the finance manager. On the day we purchased our Hyundai, our buying experience was lengthy and both my wife and I were tired so I must admit that we did not review the contract carefully before we signed it. We relied on the honesty of the nice young man sitting across the desk from us. As we drove home, we looked at the contract we had signed and found that the price of an extended service contract was much higher than we were informed, thus increasing our payment significantly.
When confronted with this, the finance manager at first denied the misrepresentation, then claimed that this was 'all our fault' even though he admitted that the figures he gave us were not accurate.
We were able to resolve the dispute but I thought a word of warning would be appropriate for those new (or exhausted) buyers out there - READ ALL THE LINES IN YOUR CONTRACT - also, the nice young man sitting across from you may not have your best interests in mind as he negotiates your purchase.
#152 of 2159
Recent purchase by teacher447
Nov 14, 2004 (6:52 pm)
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I purchased a 2004 Santa Fe in May have 6300 miles on it. It is a 4wd 3.5 gls. the only extra was the "wood" dashboard trim. I did add on after I purchased the vehicle, vent shades, mud guards, cross rails, rear cargo mat and floor mats. I ended up buying the car in MD. at Fitzmall.com, everything was done via phone and email. I was able to go to a few local Hyundai dealers in NYC, but found their prices high. I couldn't get to suburban hyundai dealers. Although I did contact a few by phone and was not impressed by the way they did business. Paid a total of $22400 with no trade in. That included ALL costs including Tax of 8.75% (Suffolk Co. NY}, license, etc. Done very professionally. I took the bus down to Wash. DC, pick up the car and drove it home. Very happy with the Santa Fe so far.
#153 of 2159
Good Deal on a 2005 Santa Fe by sactoprof
Dec 11, 2004 (3:31 pm)
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I just recently purchased a 2005 2.7L FWD GLS Santa Fe without any options (other than cross rails). It's got plenty of power. And I like the small changes they made in the '05 (e.g. grill, taillights, wheel spokes, rear bumper, seat fabric, and instrument cluster). I also liked the price: Invoice minus $600 plus $500 advertising assessment minus $750 rebate = $19,911 plus tax and license. I think that's pretty good for an '05. Great treatment at Maita Hyundai in Sacramento; I actually enjoyed buying the car. I'm already averaging almost 22 mpg on my second tank of gas, driving a mix of city and highway. The Santa Fe is as nice as the $30K+ 2000 JGC I got rid of, but without all the problems and noises. I intend to buy an aftermarket extended warranty to bring the bumper-to-bumper coverage to 10 year/100K miles.
#154 of 2159
Re: Good Deal on a 2005 Santa Fe [sactoprof] by danf1
Dec 12, 2004 (12:29 pm)
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Replying to: sactoprof (Dec 11, 2004 3:31 pm)

Can I ask why you would purchase an aftermarket warranty? Hyundai offers a 10yr 100k bumper to bumper which should compare favorably to any aftermarket plan.
#155 of 2159
danf1 (warranty) by nortsr1
Dec 12, 2004 (1:56 pm)
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Dan,
 I believe the Hyundai warranty is 5 years 60,000 miles bumpeto bumper and 10 years, 100,000 miles on the drivetrain.

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