They want to be sure SOMEONE can finance him. No sense ordering the card then finding out no one will give him a loan.
They want to be sure SOMEONE can finance him. No sense ordering the card then finding out no one will give him a loan.they should only be pulling the credit report if they are financing the deal. If he goes to his credit union or whatever, then the dealer has no right to pull the report. What if he tells them he is paying cash? Not like he is walking in there with a suitcase of $100's at order time, right?
I mean maybe but I would still walk. I've never had a dealer try that with me.They want to be sure SOMEONE can finance him. No sense ordering the card then finding out no one will give him a loan.
And honestly dealers have spent the last 2 years boning buyers every way they can, including asking markup for the privilege of buying from them, so if that is turning to where buyers are bailing or now not getting financed, then hope the extra money they got the last 2 years helps them prepareThey want to be sure SOMEONE can finance him. No sense ordering the card then finding out no one will give him a loan.
I'm not sure how someone gets "boned" when they agree to pay an asking price and purchase an item. Or does "getting boned" mean a seller refuses to agree to your price?And honestly dealers have spent the last 2 years boning buyers every way they can, including asking markup for the privilege of buying from them, so if that is turning to where buyers are bailing or now not getting financed, then hope the extra money they got the last 2 years helps them prepare
Exactly right.N F W! If your giving them a $1K deposit that's all they need to know, other than your name and address. Otherwise find a new dealer because these guys can't be trusted!
Or they're trying to see what kind of ADM you can afford when the car comes in.Current credit pull is irrelevant and useless. If the car takes six months to come in your credit could tank for all they know. And even if it didnt they will need to pull it again to check when the car comes in. Credit should only get pulled the day/week you sign. Two hard hits makes no sense.
Edit: just saw youre using a credit union. NO credit pull ever by the dealer then. Theyre trying to get you to finance with them to get more kick backs.
Exactly and then they have possibly wasted one of their allocations. I'm sure this will happen a lotThey want to be sure SOMEONE can finance him. No sense ordering the card then finding out no one will give him a loan.
Just a thought- I monitor my credit, and your own credit report is free to you. All other things being equal, and considering other replies from members, why don't you just give them a copy of your report rather than them doing a credit pull now? It's just as irrelevant as them pulling your credit now, but at least it won't ding your credit and they get the piece of mind that they aren't wasting an allocation.Dealership requires a $1,000 deposit, and also wants to run my credit report for placing a hellcat order, is it normal?
I am not using their finance, not sure whether this is appropriate.
This is most likely it. When we went to buy my wife’s Camaro they wanted to run a bunch of credit b.s. before we even talked to a salesman or test drove the car. Pissed me off. I personally think it was to see how bad they thought they could screw me. Like if my credit rating was an 800+ we can screw the guy more which is total b.s.Or they're trying to see what kind of ADM you can afford when the car comes in.
R.K.
Total nonsense. Hard pull will certainly lower your credit score and potentially raise your interest rate regardless of your income (which is, by the way, not reflected by your credit score). So the OP has a valid concern, especially if he ends up buying/financing from someone else.If you are worried about what 1 inquiry will do to your credit score you probably should not be buying a $100k car.