Best year on an already awesome carNasmfell wrote:2008 is the best year for the Vibe (and Matrix) IMO. If it checks out, that is a very good deal.
lannvouivre wrote:Best year on an already awesome carNasmfell wrote:2008 is the best year for the Vibe (and Matrix) IMO. If it checks out, that is a very good deal.
ColonelPanic wrote:Every time I see a 2008 hit the lots here with similar mileage, they're asking something like $12k for it. While these are great cars, I find it absurd to pay that much dough for a ~6-7 year old car... Especially since the original owner likely did not pay that much more for it when new. Around that time GM was discounting all of their cars to the point where they might as well have been giving them away in cereal boxes.
So that is a fantastic price on a great car!
Laughably, a couple years ago someone paid 14k for a 2008 that had been in a minor accident though fixed at the dealer selling it. The dealer that fixed the car asked under 10k, but no takers. The car went to auction, another dealer bought it. must have did a nice mark up and sold it.Nasmfell wrote:ColonelPanic wrote:Every time I see a 2008 hit the lots here with similar mileage, they're asking something like $12k for it. While these are great cars, I find it absurd to pay that much dough for a ~6-7 year old car... Especially since the original owner likely did not pay that much more for it when new. Around that time GM was discounting all of their cars to the point where they might as well have been giving them away in cereal boxes.
So that is a fantastic price on a great car!
That's due in part to it being a Toyota under the skin. 2008 Matrixes can still go for over 10K
That drives me crazy. It's got the GM badge on it. Doesn't matter that it's really a Toyota, you're not going to sell it for 14k unless it's to someone who never researches prices ever. It's just not the market price.Nasmfell wrote:Laughably, a couple years ago someone paid 14k for a 2008 that had been in a minor accident though fixed at the dealer selling it. The dealer that fixed the car asked under 10k, but no takers. The car went to auction, another dealer bought it. must have did a nice mark up and sold it.
lannvouivre wrote:That drives me crazy. It's got the GM badge on it. Doesn't matter that it's really a Toyota, you're not going to sell it for 14k unless it's to someone who never researches prices ever. It's just not the market price.Nasmfell wrote:Laughably, a couple years ago someone paid 14k for a 2008 that had been in a minor accident though fixed at the dealer selling it. The dealer that fixed the car asked under 10k, but no takers. The car went to auction, another dealer bought it. must have did a nice mark up and sold it.
Nasmfell wrote:lannvouivre wrote:That drives me crazy. It's got the GM badge on it. Doesn't matter that it's really a Toyota, you're not going to sell it for 14k unless it's to someone who never researches prices ever. It's just not the market price.Nasmfell wrote:Laughably, a couple years ago someone paid 14k for a 2008 that had been in a minor accident though fixed at the dealer selling it. The dealer that fixed the car asked under 10k, but no takers. The car went to auction, another dealer bought it. must have did a nice mark up and sold it.