Mach1E
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Sep 5, 2021
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- Florida
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- 69 Mach 1, 11 GT, 21 GTPE- sold, 24 Taycan 4S, 20 F type R
That’s fair if it’s an order. Price doesn’t have to be figured out until the end. Even so I wouldn’t recommend doing it that way. Even when I ordered my 2021 GTPE in April 2021, we had an agreed and negotiated price.Problem is I don't think a buyer ordering a new car actually has a contractual purchase agreement/price. When a customer orders a new vehicle, it's really an order by the dealer to purchase from Ford, and the dealer is simply reserving it for the buyer that requested it. The buyer can always turn it down after it arrives, and the dealer can change the price they're selling it for. That's been known to happen, especially when there's a long time between the customer "order" and the market changes significant in between.
If nothing significant happens to their cost from Ford or the market, they usually leave the price alone. It can certainly create ill will if they try to raise it after the car arrives. But it's not a contractually locked-in price unless they somehow got the dealer to agree to do that (not sure if that ever happens). A normal vehicle "order" doesn't do that. It's really more of a reservation with the first right to buy it when it arrives.
But, my post was in response to someone who said another dealer raised their prices to MSRP. That would mean it’s not an order, but something either on the lot or in route.
And I think that’s dealership BS and taking advantage of the headlines on tariffs.
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