Also I financed my one and only financed bike through USAA. If you're eligible (based on your user name I assume you are) then I'd try them.
Also I financed my one and only financed bike through USAA. If you're eligible (based on your user name I assume you are) then I'd try them.
Guess im not doing to bad then, first bike was 1-2 yrs old with 4k on it. 7 or 8k ish new bought for like 4500ish? Second bike was new and 3k, i was pissed at dealer freight/destination/etc that seemed absurd. Flat rate seemed like for any new bike almost so a big % on a 3k mini bike.
Groms seem extremely popular used market. Stock used going for very near new prices on craigs/mototrader. Its why if wife didnt take to it I knew I could flip for a mild loss.
Buying ANY motorcycle from a dealer is also something I'm unlikely to ever do again. All the little BS charges they tack on just piss me off. Yeah, I know, "everybody does it" but it's still sleazy.
Motorcycle dealers (at least the ones that sell new bikes) often tack on an 'assembly charge' to a negotiated price. Now, first of all, unless they offer you the option of buying an unassembled bike, that's pure crap. But it gets even stupider than that when they tack that charge onto USED bikes too. How the hell does it make sense to charge an 'assembly' fee on a bike that was already assembled when the dealer got it?
Again, there are HUNDREDS of nice, low mileage bikes on the private sale market. Private sales are honest: Negotiate a price, money changes hands, sign the title over, hand the keys over, deal done.
Bank of Colorado is my suggestion. Never had anything but amazing service at every single location I've ever gone into.
I'd say around 40% of the bikes for sale on Craigslist are Harleys. If it's not 40%, it's gotta be at least a third. I've seen several Sportsters for sale with less than 100 miles on them, usually something like 35 or 60 miles. Guess they rode it home from the dealer and never rode it again...[Dunno]
New MC's require set up, clutch checked, fluids and battery installed, road test to verify it's ready to go off the show room floor. Used MC's require an axle to axle check. Last thing a dealer wants is for a mc to go down the road and have brakes fail, axle nut come loose, etc.
Personally, I'd rather buy a gently used bike from some poor schlub that bought it new as a toy then realized he was in over his head, and just needs to unload it. Dealers can kiss my ass, especially HD dealers. Independent shops are another story.
Then the cost of that needs to be factored into the price, just like it is withvirtually every other product sold in the market.
If I buy a TV from Best Buy and the price is $599, then the price is $599 (plus tax which of course Best Buy has no control over.)
How would you feel if they said "OK, that's $599, plus the fee to take it off the truck, plus the fee to put it in the warehouse, plus the fee to take it to your vehicle - $680 plus tax?"
Imagine buying a gun at your LGS. Sale price is marked at $690. But when they ring it up, they add the shipping charge, the record keeping fee, the unboxing charge, the inspection charge - etc etc.
Would you put up with that? Hell no you wouldn't and neither would anybody else. But for some stupid reason we put up with this crap when it comes to motor vehicles.
Understand, I have no beef with charges that are out of the seller's control: Sales tax, excise tax, background check fees, new development surcharges - those are things that the seller can't change.
But things like "assembly" ought to be built into the price unless they're going to give you the option of buying it unassembled. Otherwise, why charge it? If it costs the dealership $200 in man-hours to assemble a bike, then instead of selling it for $5995 sell it for $6195.
I mean, dealerships might as well charge extra for wheels and tires while they're at it. Or sparkplugs. Or oil in the engine. [Rant1]
And BTW it is EXACTLY shit like this that makes me reluctant to buy from a dealer, and I'll bet I'm not the only one. I wonder if dealers could actually sell more products and have happier customers if they simply built all the extra charges into their prices and advertised that fact: "The price you see is the price you pay. No hidden charges, no bogus add on fees."