- First Name
- Ryan
- Joined
- Oct 6, 2021
- Threads
- 1
- Messages
- 7
- Reaction score
- 9
- Location
- land o lakes florida
- Vehicle(s)
- f150
- Your Bronco Model
- Wildtrak
Got this response to my review. Again just hilarious at this point.
Sponsored
I think the dealership treated the OP's Bronco as the seafood special of the day, which is available at "Market Price".Its like a menu at a restaurant. Here is the price.... You want it.... Yes.... ok now that you have eaten the price is actually more.... You enjoyed the food more than most.... and there a people waiting for a table so we decided to charge you more!!!
If they want to add ADM then they need to make customers aware AHEAD of time so they can move their order if need be. You don't pop a surprise extra $10k on ANYBODY the day their shit arrives. It's pure sleaze.
Got this response to my review. Again just hilarious at this point.
Agreed - the guy still doesn’t get it. He placed a reservation in the customers name with Ford; if you asked anyone, including Ford, that reservation belongs to the customer. That reservation was placed with certain understandings about price and fees. What was agreed was that if and when that vehicle is delivered to the dealer it would be sold to that customer at the agreed price. Market conditions changing do not make it right for the dealer to steal the reservation.I think ALL the negative reviews should stay up. The dealer didn't honor your original agreement because it was the right thing to do. They did it out of fear that prospective customers would see the reviews and go elsewhere. They are still the same scumbags today that they were yesterday. If you hadn't brought enough pressure to bear on them, you would be on the outside looking in.
Its not "their" inventory!!!!!
Got this response to my review. Again just hilarious at this point.
Well, in washington state, a verbal agreement is a binding contract. So I'm sure that a signed dealership document stating what vehicle and how much was agreed among would be more than enough.That sucks. But real question...how does the summary page (which isn't a sales contract) commit the dealer to selling it at MSRP?
Contracts work like this: offer + acceptance. The offer is the order summary where all the specific items and costs associated with my custom bronco order are detailed and provided by the dealership. Acceptance is my signature and date. WHile minor fees and tax may not be included in the order summary, those fees are expected and understood to be part of any transaction. $10k dealer markup is not and was not part of that deal.