ya but the value has to be similar (1 good car = 2 crappy cars)
Sure you can. The vehicle you want to trade has a value. You can use that value to buy 1 car 2 cars, Trade in for ferarri and buy 5 escorts. You dont even have to buy a car. 99.9% of dealerships would be happy to write you a check for your car.
You should 1st find a good source for your trade value. Blackbook makes you pay, Blue book gives silly numbers. It is powered by Auto Trader and gives you a real offer. Most dealerships will beat this offer by $200 to $1000 dollars depending on how bad they want the car but it is a realistic place to start.
Yes, you can trade in two cars when you are buying a new car. If you have them, you can trade in 20 cars. When you are trading cars, you are literally selling one car to the dealer and purchasing one car from the dealer.
Yes, definitely. Car dealers pref that kind of deal.
If the title is in his name. What if the tittle is in both of there names? We are wanting to trade off our two cars but we have a co signer who we are no longer speaking to. We are wanting to trade both cars in on one and we are wanting to lower our payments. What do you think? Could we go back to Toyota where we bought them? Trade both in and then get one lower payment if the deal works on with the dealer? We have 2 2005 cars and would to trade on 1 2004 or 2005 car. What do you think?
eat pie.
The answer is in fact 4. 3 cars in front of 1 car = 4 3 cars behind 1 car = 4 2 cars behind 2 cars = 4 All these sentences are relating to the same row of cars so there are 4 cars
No, obviously not! This is because two cars used double the amount of fuel, while one car only uses one amount of fuel
The main one is Finn McMissile and the supporting one is Holley Shiftwell
A race car
No, it would come out the vagina, and they keep that in the trunk
Tandem would be one in front of the other. I have a four car garage it is 24X60. Two cars wide (24ft) by 2 cars deep (60ft).
It depends because some ''Eco'' cars uses gas and some do. So basically, there are 2 types of ''Eco'' cars. The one that uses gas and they one that does not.
No big deal, just twice the amount of work. You and the dealer will both verify with the bank (or banks) the exact amount outstanding on the loans (the "payoff"), and what each car is worth in trade-in value. The amount left that you owe on the two trade-ins (assuming here that the outstanding debt is more than the combined trade-in value) is added to the amount you need to borrow on the new one. You may have a problem depending on how much is owed on the trade-in car(s) since a bank usually will not make a loan for more than the new car is worth. Insist that the car dealer show all the components of the deal separately and not just give you a final figure. You want to see the final sale price of the new car, the trade-in value of each of the old cars, and the loan as calculated with the old ones rolled in.