My dealer doubles mfg. 10 year/100,000 mile powertrain warranty

Mr. Wonderful

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I don't know of any other dealerships that do this. This ad shows my actual car.
I really don't think it's a great incentive, because I doubt very few people keep their cars for more than 10 years. And if they do, there is a $250 ded. per visit. Also, it is NOT transferable.
 
Still, it's impressive looking/sounding. There isn't a negative side to this offer. It says, "We'll still be here for you."
 
Well if they are not charging you for it I don't think is bad to take it unless there is a catch to it.
 
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So the dealer owns the warranty company. Every car they sell, the dealer takes a loss on the product and pays the warranty company. After the vehicle is out of warranty, and the vehicle breaks down the warranty company pays the dealer and the dealer makes money.

It's a massive way to shift money around and make money. My memory is a little rusty since I looked into it, but they are making cash faster than I can process
 
From interior to exterior to high performance - everything you need for your Stinger awaits you...
Most of these "deals" are backed by a third-party insurer, not the dealer. They somehow add the extra warranty insurance coverage to the price and the dealer's finance manager, the dealer, and the insurance company all take a cut of the (often hidden) cost of the coverage. Then they bet you will forget it after 10 years, or you'll trade the car, or the fine print will exclude most repairs as "normal wear" or "seals and gaskets." Buy the car for what it is, not for ice cream that melts in the sun. JMHO. I was a service manager back in the '80's......
 
I got Lifetime oil changes and a Lifetime Powertrain warranty. From a dealer over 2 hours away... yeah.
 
I was once happy I got the free 20yrs/200,000 powertrain warrant on mine as well, but then I heard some got lifetime Powertrain warrant and it make me sad..."RUFFSTUFF" you ruin our 20/200,000 moment :rofl:
 
Rick Case is kinda shady. becareful.
 
Yep, a dealer near me does this as well.. I actually know someone who used to work there too.. Extremely shady.. For one, you can usually never find a deal because they mark up all there cars. 2nd he said all service must be done at his dealership. You miss one oil change or one "suggested service" they cancel your extended plan (no money back to you when they do that)..
 
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From interior to exterior to high performance - everything you need for your Stinger awaits you...
As a daily driver, it's pretty much guaranteed that 200000 miles will come before 20yrs. And yes, they will bake the price of the warranty into the purchase of the car.
 
Yep, a dealer near me does this as well.. I actually know someone who used to work there too.. Extremely shady.. For one, you can usually never find a deal because they mark up all there cars. 2nd he said all service must be done at his dealership. You miss one oil change or one "suggested service" they cancel your extended plan (no money back to you when they do that)..

Yeah... My contract has words...

Untitled.webp
 
My dealer advertises a lifetime power train warranty. The catch is, you must get ALL maintenance performed at that dealer. No thank you.
 
My dealer advertises a lifetime power train warranty. The catch is, you must get ALL maintenance performed at that dealer. No thank you.
Yep, by the time you have any serious powertrain issue you would have spent enough in unnecessary and /or overpriced services to buy a brand new powertrain. When you get down to the fine print in most of these contracts there is always an escape route for the dealer. For example, the car is 19 years old with 190K miles and the engine fails and you meet all the conditions for warranty coverage. What is the dealer going to do? Replace your engine? Doubtful. Instead, they probably stipulate cost of repair or average book value of car whichever is less. So they just write you a check for $1000 and leave you with your nonoperational car. You'd probably end up buying a new car on the spot just to get home, lol.
 
Yep, by the time you have any serious powertrain issue you would have spent enough in unnecessary and /or overpriced services to buy a brand new powertrain. When you get down to the fine print in most of these contracts there is always an escape route for the dealer. For example, the car is 19 years old with 190K miles and the engine fails and you meet all the conditions for warranty coverage. What is the dealer going to do? Replace your engine? Doubtful. Instead, they probably stipulate cost of repair or average book value of car whichever is less. So they just write you a check for $1000 and leave you with your nonoperational car. You'd probably end up buying a new car on the spot just to get home, lol.
Not necessarily. If your 19 year-old Stinger was lovingly maintained by you, and the engine craps out at 190K miles, and the dealer (holder of the lifetime powertrain warranty) writes you a cheque, and everything else about your car is a keeper, you'll use the thousand bucks toward a new engine. Why would you not? I put c. $1,300 into milling the head on my '94 van c. three years ago; it ran like a top, better than when I had bought it. Never regretted that expense to "resurrect" my vehicle: always paid for upkeep as if I intended to keep it, and the rest of the van was in really good shape, etc.
 
From interior to exterior to high performance - everything you need for your Stinger awaits you...
Not necessarily. If your 19 year-old Stinger was lovingly maintained by you, and the engine craps out at 190K miles, and the dealer (holder of the lifetime powertrain warranty) writes you a cheque, and everything else about your car is a keeper, you'll use the thousand bucks toward a new engine. Why would you not? I put c. $1,300 into milling the head on my '94 van c. three years ago; it ran like a top, better than when I had bought it. Never regretted that expense to "resurrect" my vehicle: always paid for upkeep as if I intended to keep it, and the rest of the van was in really good shape, etc.
Quite possibly. But my Stinger is a daily driver so I'll probably only keep it for a short period of time (10-15 years, lol). I was just trying to point out that these extended-extended or lifetime warranties are quite likely to have minimal value and produce diminishing returns as a vehicle ages. Not bad to have some additional protection, but it's not really worth it if you had to pay a higher price for the vehicle or if the dealer in any way forces you to pay for them to routinely maintain and repair the vehicle. All they should require is that you bring the vehicle in every 5 years or so where they can inspect it at their expense.
 
Kia Stinger
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