How to Buy

Most people don’t overpay because they’re careless.
They overpay because they don’t understand how the process actually works.

This isn’t about negotiation tricks.

It’s about understanding the process, so you stay in control from start to finish.


Step 1: Decide whether to lease or buy

Before you look at a single car, decide this.

Leasing and buying are completely different strategies:

  • Leasing focuses on payment and term
  • Buying focuses on total cost and long-term value

This decision shapes everything that follows.


Step 2: Choose the right car for your situation

Don’t start with what you like. Start with what fits.

  • Budget (real budget, not monthly payment)
  • Usage (commute, family, mileage)
  • Time horizon (how long you’ll keep it)

The wrong car creates a bad deal—no matter the price.


Step 3: Know what the car should cost

You don’t need the perfect price. You need a range.

Look at:

  • MSRP vs. transaction price
  • Incentives
  • Inventory levels

You’re not trying to win. You’re trying to avoid overpaying.


Step 4: Find the car (don’t walk into a dealership yet)

Search inventory online first.

Identify:

  • Exact vehicle
  • Trim
  • Availability

Do not walk onto a lot “just to look.”
That’s where you lose leverage.


Step 5: Contact dealers the right way

Use email.

Request:

  • Out-the-door price
  • Full breakdown (fees, taxes, add-ons)

You’re gathering information—not committing.


Step 6: Get the deal in writing before you show up

This is your biggest advantage.

If it’s not in writing:

  • It can change
  • It probably will

Only go in once you have a clear, documented deal.


Step 7: Understand the fees before signing

This is where people lose money late in the process.

👉 Read: Dealer Fees Explained

Know:

  • What’s required
  • What’s negotiable
  • What’s pure markup

Step 8: Negotiate only what matters

Don’t negotiate everything.

Focus on:

  • Vehicle price
  • Financing terms (if applicable)

Ignore:

  • Distractions
  • Upsells

The goal isn’t to “win.”

The goal is to stay in control and make a confident decision.