Re: Trailer Purchase [NFC]
From: Brian E. Buxton (BrianBuxtonBuxtonMotorsports.com)
Date: Sat, 20 Oct 2007 14:52:38 -0700 (PDT)
Charles,
Trailers are exactly like vehicles re: the purchasing process and the amount of money that can be negotiated off the price. Maybe even more so. There is a decent amount of profit in trailer, and sometimes dealers will advertise them very inexpensively to sell volume, and some will advertise full MSRP and try to make good profits on fewer units. Obviously exactly as with cars, the more expensive the trailer the more profit (and negotiating room) there is. I am currently pricing out a 43' 5th wheel Featherlite (38' on the floor) 2 car trailer with a lot of custom options (12V power, shore power, 3 different types of lights in the floor as well as in the side and rear of the trailer - all independently switched, 10K pound wireless winch in the floor, power winch and rear trailer door, etc.). Basically I am paying retail for the trailer shell and getting all of the options for free ... basically $12K worth of options. Not too bad in my opinion.


As I tell all of my clients (regardless of whether they buy from me or not), buy the best that you can afford - the best deal is not always the least expensive price. And if you are buying it new, get as many options as you can afford or that are reasonable. Even if you never use them they will make the car/truck/trailer hold value better and be more salable to a wider range of people when you go to sell whatever it is. As an example, ordering an H2 Hummer with a sunroof adds $800 to the price of the vehicle. But the wholesale price of the same vehicle (used) without a sunroof is $3,000 LESS than if it had one. So you are money ahead buying the sunroof, even if you never open it.

Hope this helps.

Brian



Charles Perry wrote:

Gang -

I am about to purchase a horse trailer for my wife. This is my first
trailer purchase so I need to borrow the list's expertise. We have
researched the trailers pretty thoroughly and believe we have narrowed
down what we want, but before we buy I wonder if any of you who have
experience can tell me anything about negotiating prices for trailers.
I'm sure there is "room to move" as they say, but any idea what margins
are on trailers? There seem to be relatively few dealers for some brands
and of the 6 brands or so we've looked at, they all are within a few
hundred dollars of each other.

Just wondering if this is like buying a car or if the pricing is
relatively inflexible.

Since I will eventually be buying a car trailer for myself as well,
related stories are appreciated!

-- charles



Results generated by Tiger Technologies Web hosting using MHonArc.