Understanding How the Pay-Off for Your Trade-In Works!
It's very easy to get confused about how the pay-off is handled in a car deal. Almost everyone who trades a car into a car dealer on a new purchase has a pay-off on their trade.
The pay-off is how much you owe the lender for your trade. It in no way reflects how much your trade is worth, and most often the pay-off is higher than your trade's actual value.
When you buy a vehicle this is how the numbers break down:
Selling price of the new vehicle
+ Any Add-ons like extended warranty, protection package, etc.
+ Sales tax, title, documentation and registration fees
- Trade-in allowance
- Cash down and rebates
+ Pay-off on trade
_____________________
= Total Amount Due
Now adding the payoff back on to the "Amount Due" tends to throw a lot of people for a loop! They have a hard time understanding why the payoff has to be added back on once the dealer agrees to a trade figure.
You must remember, the loan on the trade is yours - not the dealers - and it must be paid off so the dealer can have a clear title to the trade. In essence, the dealer is buying the trade from you, and you can't sell it to him if there is an outstanding balance owed on it. So the pay-off gets added on to your "Amount Due" and then the dealer takes that money and pays off the loan. The lending institution in return sends the dealer a clear title and everyone is happy.
Remember, the pay-off is your responsibility not the dealer's. The dealer is actually doing you a service by simplifying the the way you pay off your vehicle. It also allows the dealer to control the process so they don't get stuck with a trade-in that has a lien and an outstanding loan on it.
Now having said that remember that most car dealers are honest and do business in a legitimate way, and they will pay off your outstanding loan promptly, or as soon as they get the funds on the car deal. It's to their benefit to pay it off right away so they can then sell the car. If they don't have a clear title for the vehicle they can't legally sell it.
However, there have been occasions when a car dealer waits to make the pay-off, or in rare cases doesn't pay it off at all. This is illegal and can get a dealer in a lot of trouble, but sometimes they are having cash flow problems or - again - in very rare cases you come up against a crook.
If the dealer doesn't pay-off you loan within a reasonable amount of time (one to three weeks) the lender is going to be looking for you to make a payment when it comes due. I have even seen cases where the customer didn't know for several months that the pay-off hadn't been made, and it was actually causing late payment entries on their credit report.
Remember...I said this was a rare occurrence, so don't panic if you have a trade with a pay-off. There are steps you can take to protect yourself. If you trade a car with a pay-off get a written statement from the dealership signed by either the Sales Manager or the Finance Manager stating that they will in fact pay off your trade and by what date. The statement should include the following information:
- The date of the document
- The amount of the pay-off
- By what date will the pay-off be made by
- How long the pay-off amount is good for (because the amount changes as interest accrues)
- The year, make, model, mileage and serial number of the car being paid off
- The name and mailing address of the lending institution
- The name of the person at the lending institution who verified the pay-off amount
- The signature of either the Sales Manager or the Finance Manager
This way if anything goes awry you have something in writing to protect yourself, and to prove the dealer agreed to make the pay-off. As I said before, most dealers are honest, but it's always a good business practice to protect yourself.
If a dealer refuses to give you a written statement on the pay-off you should not complete the deal. To me this would be a big red flag! Go do business with another dealer who will accommodate your request. There are too many honest dealers out there for you to waste your time with a questionable one.
Until next time...
Tony Iorio
www.InsiderCarSecrets.com
My Contact Information



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