Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Tricks. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Tricks. Afficher tous les articles

Tricks in Getting a Low Premium With Full Coverage for Luxury Car Insurance






Buying a luxury car is a desire for everyone in this world and buying cars like Audi R8 or Porsche 911 Carrera. Latest survey says that buying luxury car has been increased about 10.3% compared to the previous year 2009. Your dream car must be insured to protect against the theft, accident, vandalism and natural calamities. Average cost of the luxury car is $50,000 and if you like to insure your car with basic coverage with yearly premium rate goes around 5% of your total price of the car. Insurance agents mostly offer all unnecessary coverage just to increase our premium rates before going to insure your dream luxury car you have to know the mandatory insurance coverage and other coverage. Here are some useful tricks to be followed to reduce your yearly premium amount.





How to reduce your premium amount for car insurance without losing the coverage?





There are several tricks in getting the premium amount reduction:





1. Gain the No claim Bonus (N.C.B) which many insurance companies offer the discounts with higher N.C.B. N.C.B is if you not made any claim during 12 months or greater you are eligible to N.C.B





2. Most of the Car insurance companies offer the less car usage discount, so if you travel less distance with your luxury car then you can get the less usage car discount.





3. Insurance companies like alliance, New York and G.E.I.C.O offers the discount of about 5% in yearly premium for the drivers who are taking a monthly driving course in recognized driving authority institution.





4. If you enabled the security devices like G.P.S, security alarms insurance companies offer the 5% discount for yearly premium.





5. Increasing your deductible amount makes you to claim for big amount, for example: Your car met with an accident and need $2000 dollars to repair and your



deductible amount is $1000, then you have to pay $1000 and company only pays $1000, so increasing your deductible amount gives you relief from paying our own money.





6. Include additional drivers like your son or daughter as a second driver if they studying college or school as young drivers with good grade in school and college get discount of 5% in yearly premium.





Things to be remember Before Signing the Offer Document:





1. Check whether the insurance coverage quoted is needed and their terms and conditions and it covers all mandatory coverage like accident and damage protection, theft coverage.



2. Make sure that the electronic equipments in the car also included in the coverage.



3. Include the second drivers and add the details like their date of birth and license Number.



4. Ask for the above discounts to reduce the yearly premium amount.



5. Read the Terms and conditions offered by the insurance company carefully and if you have any doubts and questions regarding the financial terms raise the question to your insurance adviser.


Tricks in Getting a Low Premium With Full Coverage for Luxury Car Insurance






Buying a luxury car is a desire for everyone in this world and buying cars like Audi R8 or Porsche 911 Carrera. Latest survey says that buying luxury car has been increased about 10.3% compared to the previous year 2009. Your dream car must be insured to protect against the theft, accident, vandalism and natural calamities. Average cost of the luxury car is $50,000 and if you like to insure your car with basic coverage with yearly premium rate goes around 5% of your total price of the car. Insurance agents mostly offer all unnecessary coverage just to increase our premium rates before going to insure your dream luxury car you have to know the mandatory insurance coverage and other coverage. Here are some useful tricks to be followed to reduce your yearly premium amount.





How to reduce your premium amount for car insurance without losing the coverage?





There are several tricks in getting the premium amount reduction:





1. Gain the No claim Bonus (N.C.B) which many insurance companies offer the discounts with higher N.C.B. N.C.B is if you not made any claim during 12 months or greater you are eligible to N.C.B





2. Most of the Car insurance companies offer the less car usage discount, so if you travel less distance with your luxury car then you can get the less usage car discount.





3. Insurance companies like alliance, New York and G.E.I.C.O offers the discount of about 5% in yearly premium for the drivers who are taking a monthly driving course in recognized driving authority institution.





4. If you enabled the security devices like G.P.S, security alarms insurance companies offer the 5% discount for yearly premium.





5. Increasing your deductible amount makes you to claim for big amount, for example: Your car met with an accident and need $2000 dollars to repair and your



deductible amount is $1000, then you have to pay $1000 and company only pays $1000, so increasing your deductible amount gives you relief from paying our own money.





6. Include additional drivers like your son or daughter as a second driver if they studying college or school as young drivers with good grade in school and college get discount of 5% in yearly premium.





Things to be remember Before Signing the Offer Document:





1. Check whether the insurance coverage quoted is needed and their terms and conditions and it covers all mandatory coverage like accident and damage protection, theft coverage.



2. Make sure that the electronic equipments in the car also included in the coverage.



3. Include the second drivers and add the details like their date of birth and license Number.



4. Ask for the above discounts to reduce the yearly premium amount.



5. Read the Terms and conditions offered by the insurance company carefully and if you have any doubts and questions regarding the financial terms raise the question to your insurance adviser.


Top 9 Used Car Salesmen Tricks, and How to Avoid Them




One of the biggest moments in many people’s lives is driving off in their brand-spanking-new automobile. It’s an exhilarating feeling. It’s also a big moment because in that very instant, that brand-spanking-new car loses a big chunk of its value—the difference between the retail price you paid and the car’s wholesale value. That’s typically thousands gone in an instant.

That’s why some car buyers choose to shop around for a used car. You save yourself that steep initial drop-off in value. More importantly, you get a car that runs just as well, is just as dependable, and looks and feels as good as that new car—that is, if you play your cards right.

For if there is one pitfall of buying a used car, it’s the risk of buying a lemon, a junker—call it what you want, you get the point: the wrong car. Used car dealers, after all, have nearly as bad a reputation, if not worse, than lawyers do. This holds true for individual people selling their cars through newspapers, Web auctions and classified sites, or with the old-fashioned signs in their car windows. The saying, “Buyer Beware,” no where has more meaning than with cars.

The opposite to that, of course, is that there are some real steals out there in used cars. We’re talking about quality vehicles that will perform beyond your expectations at a low price. Here’s how to find these perfect used vehicles, and avoid the top 10 scams that used car dealers everywhere try to pull on you.

1. Get a second opinion for the hype. Used car dealers will bombard you with every adjective under the book to sell you on a car—sporty, thrifty, fast, and etc. Don’t take their word for it. Instead, find someone you know, whether a neighbor, a colleague, a family member, or a friend, who owns the same make and model of the vehicle, and ask them for their opinion.

2. Do a background check. One of the most unethical, but legal, things someone can do to you is sell you a used car that’s been in a flood (and sort of repaired), or one that’s had 10 previous owners (none of whom repaired it). To be sure you don’t fall victim to this, track down a history report, including a clearance check on the vehicle title. You can even get some of this information from the seller, simply by asking why they are selling it. You’d be surprised what beans people may spill.

3. Examine for past damage. Used car dealers may also try to peddle a vehicle that was wrecked in a major accident. It’s amazing what autobody experts can do to repair a car’s exterior. So don’t go by the outer appearances of a vehicle. Before you buy it, make sure that it does not have serious damage to its frame, which it would have if it was involved in a crash.

4. Call up your trusted mechanic. Used car dealers, especially the big lots, will say they put their used cars through a “100 point inspection,” or something like that. Once again, a second opinion is in order. Get this one from your own mechanic. He’ll be able to tell how good a shape the car actually is in. Also be sure to ask him or her how often the car had been serviced. A good mechanic can even gauge that.

5. Research for recalls. Needless to say, a used car dealer may sell you a car that’s actually under recall in his mad rush to get the car off his lot. So be sure to call the car manufacturer, or visit their Web site, to see if the vehicle has any active recalls.

6. Avoid the leftover lemon. Along with recalled vehicles, dealers may even perpetrate something much worse on you—sell you a lemon. (By definition, a lemon is a car that’s still under warranty, which has such major problems that, warranty or not, it still cannot be fixed in a reasonable way.) The best way to avoid this is to research in Consumer Reports or the various automobile magazines, which all have yearly reviews of every make and model on the market. They’ll tell you whether a kind of car is known for being a lemon and prone to breakdowns.

7. See through the old paint and bait. Along with performing their “100 point inspection,” car dealers may shine and wax a used car—even repaint it—to hide dents, dings, and rust spots. A keen eye, though, can see right through this.

8. Take the test drive. Once you’ve done all your research, homework, extra credit, and everything else called for in the first seven steps, then comes the fun—the test drive. Drive the car for as long as its owner or dealer will allow you. Then you’ll get a better feel for how the vehicle handles, accelerates, brakes, and otherwise suits your tastes (or doesn’t).

9. Be wary of the pushy seller. At any stage of the game—from the moment you first talk to the seller to the test drive—be careful if the seller gets pushy. Any dealer or seller who is in a rush to move a vehicle should set off bells and whistles. Why the rush? Are they hiding something? In some cases the seller may just be excited to sell you the car—and actually happy for you—but in many other cases, they may be up to something. Better be safe than sorry.

Follow these 9 simple steps to avoid the scams and pitfalls of used car deals, and you could get the car of your dreams—for far less than you’d pay if it was brand-new. Plus, you get that same high when you drive your new used car home, without losing thousands of dollars.


How To Buy Your Dream Car And Avoid Car Dealers' Dirty Tricks




How to buy a new Car

Buying a car is usually our second biggest investment after our home purchase and most of us will do it more than once in our life.

There is something emotional about cars, it represents our taste and style, our economic status and our character. Some women even claim that a car is a man’s extension of his reproductive organ. One the other hand (the good hand) there are women out there that might express their exhibitionism and extravagance by choosing to drive a red flashy car for the whole world to notice them. Both sexes would agree they sometimes feel they ”fall in love” with a certain car model.

There are people who get very existed from a small scratch on the cars lower side, as if it were their own skin. The beauty of the car, its aerodynamics shape, the gadgets inside, the seats the feel of it all play a major part in our decision making.

In our modern life it’s almost impossible to function without one and it’s expensive to acquire, to finance and to maintain.

Buying a new car is a lot of fun, the new car has its unique smell no doubt about it, the very fact you can afford to own a brand new car is a great feeling.

When is the best time to buy a new car?

There are two "best times" to buy a car. The end of December is a good time for car buyers to buy a new car. Everyone is out buying Christmas gifts, leaving new car dealer lots void of customers, motivating dealers to cut costs, and break year end sales records. Another good time to buy a car is July to October as new car dealers sell off cars at low prices to clear space for new car models. Secret factory to dealer incentives can be $1000-$6000 in addition to new car consumer rebates!

How and where to search for prices:

Invoice price – what the dealer pays the manufacturer – has become the real negotiating point. Allowing for the dealer's need to make a profit, the price you pay should be somewhere between sticker and invoice.

Virtually all car buying sites on the Internet show invoice and in most cases their buying tools automatically add option/package invoice amounts as you work your way through the process.

Any car buyer, with very little effort, can get an accurate summation of a car's value, which immediately puts him or her in a stronger negotiating position.

Happily for the consumer, the Internet now allows a prospective buyer to uncover market conditions at any moment in various parts of the country. Search for Edmunds.com on the web.

for example, reveals the True Market Value: CarsDirect.com, which sells cars online, has its own version called Guaranteed CarsDirect price Intellichoice.com sorts out the Best Deals of the Month.

The negotiation phase and the dirty tricks:

After you made your research via the Internet, it’s important you make some phone calls to car dealers and ask for some written offers to be sent to you via the fax or email for the car of your dreams. That way, you can compare prices between several dealers without being pressured by a salesperson.

You would be much better off selling your old car yourself rather than to trade it in through the dealer because the dealer will have to earn some money on it as well.

Remember, everything is a negotiable, car too. Buying a new car is tricky from the moment you step into the car dealership arena, you might be manipulated by scam artists, well trained sales persons that will use every trick in their fat book of tricks to extort every last Dollar out of your bank account.

There is one well known trick they teach in car dealers sales courses, it’s called “throwing a lowball”, in this tactic a customer is offered a very good price on a car, Perhaps as much as $500 below competitors prices. The good deal, however, is not genuine, its only purpose is to cause a prospect to decide to buy at this dealership and not from the other dealers. Once the decision is made a raft of purchase forms are filled out, extensive financial terms are arranged. The dealer knows, customers develop a range of new reasons to support the choice they have now made.

Then something happens. All of a sudden an “error” in the calculations is discovered, It might be the salesman forgot to add in the cost of the air conditioner and if the customer insists on having it, then $500 must be added to the price...

The cover up operation is played sophistically, some times they let the bank handling the financing find the “mistake”, other times the boss is not approving the deal because “we’d be losing money”. They make it look as if it’s not that big mistake as it’s a relatively small percentage of the price of the car and as they stress out it only brings it to be equal to competitors.

The impressive thing about the lowball tactic is its ability to make a person feel pleased with a poor choice. If anyone tries to change the originally-quoted terms or talk you into buying a different vehicle, just say "no" and go somewhere else.

If you are interested to learn about many others car dealers scams and how to avoid them go to: carbuyingtips.com/scams

Until all the papers have been signed there are still ways in which a shrewd dealer may add to his profit by talking you into extras you don't want and probably don't need. These can include added and overpriced insurance, extended warranties, rust proofing (absolutely unnecessary), paint or fabric protection, anti-theft plans, and more. Smile and firmly turn them all down.

Finally, before you drive away, do a careful inspection of the car, looking for scratches or dents; anything that mars the perfect finish. If you're not happy, get a written agreement (known as a Due Bill). It means you have the right to later return the vehicle in order that flaws can be corrected.