vexingv
Senior Member
- First Name
- V
- Joined
- Apr 15, 2023
- Threads
- 13
- Messages
- 149
- Reaction score
- 56
- Location
- Bay Area, CA
- Car(s)
- '24 ITS LCM/Red; '16 BMW M235-xdrive
- Thread starter
- #1
In speaking with a dealership rep last week, I was told by this sales rep that the dealership invoice price for the ITS was something like $50K or $51K (he was going over numbers pretty quickly with me on the phone) -- he encouraged me to look it up on Edmonds or elsewhere online. I was a bit incredulous about this stated invoice price and thinking he was just blowing smoke as after all, when manufacturers price a vehicle, it includes some level of dealer profit. He then was almost apologetic when he said that the dealership had to "markup" the car in order to make any money on the sale. After which, he proceeded to tell me the markup price of ~$12K , but justified that as it included all the accessories and installation (so carbon trim, shifter, alcantara steering wheel, et al, but not the copper wheels) and saying it was really just a $6K markup given the value of the addons (OTD price close to $70-71K with taxes and fess).
In that conversation, he said the dealership makes more money selling an MDX, even with $4K discount below MSRP, than it does selling an Integra. That indeed may be true as SUV's and crossovers have higher profit margins and sell in higher volumes than sedans do, which is why the automotive industry in the US is the way it is right now. But while invoice pricing is just one component in car pricing and the dealership may actually pay less than "invoice" with volume discounts or incentives from manufacturers, I wonder what is the actual invoice price for the Integra Type S? (And thus, what is the fat profit these dealers may be making with the markups?)
In that conversation, he said the dealership makes more money selling an MDX, even with $4K discount below MSRP, than it does selling an Integra. That indeed may be true as SUV's and crossovers have higher profit margins and sell in higher volumes than sedans do, which is why the automotive industry in the US is the way it is right now. But while invoice pricing is just one component in car pricing and the dealership may actually pay less than "invoice" with volume discounts or incentives from manufacturers, I wonder what is the actual invoice price for the Integra Type S? (And thus, what is the fat profit these dealers may be making with the markups?)
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