If the dealer will let you. Once you sign papers, the car is yours. If the dealer takes pity on you, they might make a clean swap. Chances are they will offer to buy your new car from you for way less than you purchased it for and then sell you another car. So you would have a new loan to pay plus the rollover from your old loan. It wouldn't be worth selling in my opinion. If you want to sell your car, try selling person to person first. Get what you owe for it or you will have to pay the difference with your own money in order to get the title in the mail and transfer to the new owner. Then go to a dealer and get a new car and new loan. My best advice if you absolutely can't stand your current car.
Conservatively, $180 million
There is no such thing as a time limit. When you buy a new car and drive it off the lot it instantly becomes a used car. Of course you can turn right around and trade it in on another new car in 60, 90, 120, etc days, but you will pay the difference in what this used car you are trading in is worth, and the new car sticker, which will be less that what you paid. I think you are really asking if there is a cooling off period on the purchase of an auto and the answer is no.
That totally depends upon the terms of the lease that was signed.
One can purchase buses in Canada from Major Vehicle Exchange a dealer of used shuttle and wheelchair bus specialty. They also sell shuttle buses, tour buses, used and new buses.
No, it's on the New York Stock Exchange.
If a dealer dented your new car, you are not eligible for a new car. The dealer is responsible for fixing the dent only.
No, the new car dealer pays off your current car and adds any money you still owe on your current car to the cost of the new car.
Yes, it is possible to buy a car from a dealer in one state and pick it up in another state from a dealer of the same car company. Although this transaction might be unusual, it is possible. Shipping charges might apply depending on the situation.
If you mean exchanging a new car you don't like for another one, yes you can. However, unless the car is a lemon (and covered under your state's lemon law) or has some other major unresolved problem, you'll end up paying for the price difference between vehicles. For instance, as soon as you buy a car, it loses value. That instant depreciation is typically about 10 percent of the car's value. Own it and drive it for a while and it will depreciate further. A dealer may be willing to arrange for you to exchange a vehicle, but the cost is typically on the shoulders of the consumer, not the dealer or the manufacturer.
There are no laws against this and it is the preferred method when you need to exchange a complete seat due to the time it takes to get a replacement from the factory. Unlike a typical part seats are not a stock item and need to be special ordered for the color and material as well as controls.
How do you get a car dealer and broker license in pa?
It depends on what state your in and your reason for wanting to return it. Some dealers will take a car back in exchange for another if they are a reputable dealer. In the state of Ohio , once you sign the paperwork, you can not return it unless there is a very valid reason other than you changed your mind ( according to the state ).
If the car that the dealer delivers is not the car that is identified in the contract, then the DEALER is in default, not you.
Sure, but you will have to pay the difference when trading in a used car for a new car. It lost considerble value when you drove it off the lot.
i just bought a brand new car 24hrs ago and the engine was stalling on me. can i return it. get another car or cancel the deal completely. I did your spelling corrections. You take the car to the dealer and tell them what it was doing. You probably will not get a new car. They will probably fix it. It's not like you have purchased a toaster and it didn't work. Give the dealer a chance to make it right. First Car right.
A new car has no former owner except the dealer.
Certainly. If you buy a new car from a dealer and then wreck it, the dealer will be happy to give you back your old car and promptly return all of your money, and take back the ruined new car.