Help: Lease return vehicles

Will

New member
Apr 30, 2008
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Mt. Pleasant, IA
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I'm asking this on a couple sites hoping to get as much feedback on this as possible

I've been looking for a new truck lately. I've given the local dealership a list of what I want. He doesn't have anything in their inventory but said that a way to go would be to look into lease return vehicles.

This is how it was explained to me when he emailed me about it:

We would cover the equipment, miles, look at pictures, and run a Carfax. Once we find a truck that would work for you we would cover the numbers. Once we agree on the numbers, we would buy the truck and run it through our shop to make sure everything is in great shape. Then you would come in and drive it to make sure you like the way it drives. If everything looks good to you, then we would do the paperwork to make it yours. Now if the truck gets here and it is not in the exact condition they promised it is in, you don't take it. We would send it back to them before you even saw it. We do this many times a month though and in the 11 years I have been here, I think we have only had to send one vehicle back. The only issue that we face when we do a used locate is that most of the vehicles that are listed on there are only available for 48 hours or so, so if we find one that you like, we would need to move somewhat quickly to ensure that we can purchase that truck for you.


So my question is has anyone gone through this? How was the experience? Is there any price difference between going this route and waiting til something comes on the lot? Are these good deals or just some sort of dealer scam? I'm hoping to find an LML with less the 10K miles on it but I don't know if that will be possible or not.
 

MACKIN

Smell My Finger...
Aug 14, 2006
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Connecticut
It's no different then buying any vehicle. Basically they are just going to auctions or what ever network they have and use and trying to find you a truck equipped the way you want. If they can buy it right and it passes dealer inspection They and you crunch numbers . You inspect you like you buy!

I don't see anything weird? :confused:


Many vehicles sold are off lease returned vehicles!
 

FrankenMax

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Mar 30, 2011
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Round mountain NV
I have a buddy that has done this manny times in the last 4 or 5 years. He's big in to Pontiac grocery getters that are supercharged. He's gotten some killer deals on low mileage cars. But I have to be honest he's never got his hands on anything with 10k or under on the clock. All of them have had between 17 and 20k on them. The dealer he and I use specializes in lease returns and demos. My advice would be try to find out how the dealers reputation is also do a BBB search. If it all looks good go for it.


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Fastorange

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Jan 31, 2009
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ohio
its all in what you like.... just watch what you are agreeing too.... i believe its a law that you have 72 hours to take it back if you dont like it... remember in most dealerships you are already paying for them to service it..... they like to scam you and make you pay for it again
 

Will

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Apr 30, 2008
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Mt. Pleasant, IA
www.myspace.com
Alright thanks guys. I didn't figure this was anything new, just something new to me I guess. Only thing I don't really like is that I have a certain time limit basically to agree to the truck but it is what it is.
 

metron

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Sep 13, 2012
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Buffalo, NY
Sold cars for awhile at one of the biggest Auto groups in NY, so here's my 0.02

A lease trade in a better buy than used. Lease standards are fairly high so people take care of them more so they don't get hit with penalties when they go turn it in (milage, damage etc...) Also when you lease a vehicle you have to have full coverage because the manufacturer owns the vechile so any damage or accidents must be reported. With used cars CARFAX is only good of the person reports it to thier insurance co. The GM service report works the same way. servicing only shows up on that when the customer uses a GM service facility. There is nothing saying the previous owner couldn't have done servicing themselves.

All vehcile being sold to a customer has to go through the same inspections used or lease trade in. The dealership I worked had a 50% rule. If anything was below 50% it was replaced such as tire, wipers etc. it also included scheduled maintenance items such as tranny flushes etc. If your worried about issues beyond their basic inspection spend the extra money usually $300 and get the GM Certifed Warrenty.

Buying a lease trade in is just like buying a used car. If your looking for something specific and dealer "A" doesn't have it you can put in an "order" and they will find one matching what you want, either from an auction or wait for one to get turned in at thier dealership. If dealer "B" has that vehicle, dealer "A" cannot simply buy it form dealer "B" they have to wait until it goes to auction. If dealer "B" doesn't send it to auction but insted puts it on thier lot then the only way for you to get it is to buy it from dealer "B". All dealers have inventory lists of other dealers lease turn in but even though they may work for the same manufacturer each dealership is privatly owned so they can't just simple swap vehicles back and forth.

There is no time restriction on when you have to buy the vehicle if they find you what your looking for. Some dealers will tell you that becuase sometimes people "order" vehicles that don't move as quickly off thier lots ex. Mini Coopers, if you order a bright yellow mini cooper convertable from a Chevy dealer and they find you one, they buy it and now own it. if your change your mind theyre stuck with it, they cant simply "return" it they have to either put it on thier lot or send it to auction, either way costs them money. The time contraint he refered to is when they ship them off to auction. Yes most times within about 48-72 hrs they ship em off but they only do that so they can have less overhead on thier lot. If they have what you want there is nothing holding them back from keeping it for you longer.

Last piece of advise don't sign anything or even put down a deposit. There is no need to. a verbal agreement of, you will purchse the vehicle if they find you exaxctly what you want should be more than enough to surfise. Just make sure if they do find you what your looking for that you intend to purchase it. Nothing worse than spending days searching for a vehicle and the buyer backs at the last minute taking that lil bit (yes it's a lil bit, house get majority or the profit) out of that salesman pocket.
 
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