Every single vehicle (new or used) that I have ever bought from a dealer has come with a full tank of fuel and I think that’s standard operating procedure. I have to wonder if this was a way to take a shot at someplace you dislike.It just occurred to me to wonder what to expect, when my Bronco finally arrives, how much fuel it is likely to have in it.
It's slightly more than just an idle question. You see, my dealership is in an area that I perceive as being a very high-crime area, even by California standards, and also notorious for very high fuel prices, even by California standards. The very worst sh••hole (by some reports, literally, as in the streets and sidewalks are literally littered with human feces) in the entire state of California is only a few miles north of my dealer. Once @Seanette and I have our Bronco, we're going to want to get out of that area as quickly as we can, and not stop anywhere until we're a safe distance away. Which leads me to wonder if, when we pick up our Bronco, it will have enough fuel to do so.
I gotta ask. You do realize this thread has been inactive for almost a year and the OP is no longer a member right?Every single vehicle (new or used) that I have ever bought from a dealer has come with a full tank of fuel and I think that’s standard operating procedure. I have to wonder if this was a way to take a shot at someplace you dislike.
Didn’t realize they weren’t a member any longer, but had realized it was an older thread. (Shrug).I gotta ask. You do realize this thread has been inactive for almost a year and the OP is no longer a member right?
In AZ, I have never had a dealer charge to fill the tank.full tank, but I paid $90 for it...
It was worth it, -$1000 below invoice coupled with price protection got me almost $6000 below sticker.In AZ, I have never had a dealer charge to fill the tank.
Always received a full tank from a "name brand" dealership. New or used.
Small little roadside used-car dealership it's normally pretty empty.