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If BB val is $3000 now, reasonable guess of $3500 then, +/-200 or so. ok4450 January 21, 2010, 5:20pm 6. Basing a vehicle value on condition may not be entirely accurate either because the majority of opinions on their personal cars are usually subjective rather than objective. A determination of excellent condition may mean good, good may mean ...
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I’m considering buying a 2001 Prius from a friend. He put a new battery in the car two years ago and my friend thinks that the value of the battery should be added on to the Kelly Blue Book value of the car. But I was under the impression that this is considered maintenance and is already accounted for in the KBB price. If the Kelly Blue Book value is about $5,500 - $6,000 and he paid $2,800 ...
If the KBB fair condition value is $9,000, I’d take off $1,500 because KBB is unrealistically high, that leaves $7,500. Then take another $1,500 for repairs, so you’d offer $6,000. If the seller balks, offer $7,500 if the car comes to you with a new timing belt, new plugs, and new front brakes. Since you didn’t mention the year of the car ...
It’s more of a guessing game than most people realize. oldbodyman August 30, 2011, 2:51am 3. Kelley and Edmunds are always high in their prices. NADA is what the dealers use. Now in add’s they will so much off Kelley or Edmunds. But if you check NADA that price will be right on NADA’s or real close.
A “factory new” engine on a used car will tend to INCREASE value, but by an amount considerably less than the market value of the engine. A “150,000 mile car” would be worth less than a “150,000 mile car…with 10,000 miles on a factory reman.” (In fact, cars with brand new engines and trannies tend to BRAG about the fact in the ...
Griffey1 August 3, 2019, 2:16pm 1. I have a 2007 Acura RDX Turbo. My turbo is shot. I was told a new one installed is $7000, used turbo installed $4000, and rebuilt installed $3500. Seems high to me considering blue book on the car $4000. My question is does this seem out of line?
The original price tag on the car was around $57000. My monthly payments have been $600/mo. So at the end of the lease, I’ll have paid a total $21600. So the car should have $35400 residual value left. However, The dealer is offering $41000+ buyout if I purchase it by the end of this month.
Car now has 126k miles and the blue book value is between $3-5k. Obviously, really frustrating to have paid so much for diagnosis with very little agreement and a car that I can’t drive. The key question seems to be: what can cause a car to idle & run great (really great) until it warms up and then stalls and dies.
Chances are, varies by state, the DMV will require the recipient to pay sales tax on the value of the vehicle regardless of what you put on the bill of sale. +1 Just like virtually every type of regulation, this will vary from state to state. In NJ, my father transferred a car to me for $1, which was far below the actual value of the vehicle.