06-22-2010, 12:38 AM
Yeah I was thinking the same thing....they're going to make more money if you choose to use their financing so they'd ideally give you money off of the car not add to it. Unless like Steve said they offered the option for either a really low interest rate or your choice of dealer cash back.
Depending on what interest rate you got, you may want to consider refinancing. I refinanced my Acura the day after I bought it through a credit union and my rate is like 2.5%+ lower than what it would have been (used car rates are always going to be higher than new cars).
Depending on what interest rate you got, you may want to consider refinancing. I refinanced my Acura the day after I bought it through a credit union and my rate is like 2.5%+ lower than what it would have been (used car rates are always going to be higher than new cars).
Posting in the banalist of threads since 2004
2017 Mazda CX-5 GT AWD Premium
Past: 2016 GMC Canyon All Terrain Crew Cab / 2010 Jaguar XFR / 2012 Acura RDX AWD Tech / 2008 Cadillac CTS / 2007 Acura TL-S / 1966 5.0 HO Mustang Coupe
2001 Lexus IS300 / 2004 2.8L big turbo WRX STI / 2004 Subaru WRX / A couple of old trucks
2017 Mazda CX-5 GT AWD Premium
Past: 2016 GMC Canyon All Terrain Crew Cab / 2010 Jaguar XFR / 2012 Acura RDX AWD Tech / 2008 Cadillac CTS / 2007 Acura TL-S / 1966 5.0 HO Mustang Coupe
2001 Lexus IS300 / 2004 2.8L big turbo WRX STI / 2004 Subaru WRX / A couple of old trucks
