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Credit Union Car Warranty vs Dealer Warranty
Posted on 12/7/22 at 8:46 pm
Posted on 12/7/22 at 8:46 pm
Anyone buy a car and get a car warranty from a credit union? It seems to be significantly cheaper and cover the same repairs. I am just wary of using a credit union because I have not used one for a car warranty before.
Posted on 12/7/22 at 9:16 pm to Hornetjames3
How much are they charging? Just anecdotal, but I bought a brand new car in 2015 and haven't spent more than $1000 in repairs (the bulk of it being a recent check engine light that wouldn't go away). It may be cheaper to forgo the warranty and take your chances.
Posted on 12/7/22 at 10:07 pm to Witty_Username
$1800 for 8 years and 120k miles for credit union. $2500 7 year 100k from dealership.
Posted on 12/7/22 at 10:53 pm to Hornetjames3
If its not a toyota, id probably think the credit union offer is a good deal.
if a toyota, dont waste money on the warranty.
if a toyota, dont waste money on the warranty.
Posted on 12/7/22 at 11:45 pm to Hornetjames3
Is the credit union financing the purchase?
They are just selling a product. You would deal with the warranty company. Because they are a credit union and don’t have as much of a profit motive, they can sell it cheaper
Extended warranty is a huge income item for a dealership
They are just selling a product. You would deal with the warranty company. Because they are a credit union and don’t have as much of a profit motive, they can sell it cheaper
Extended warranty is a huge income item for a dealership
Posted on 12/8/22 at 5:47 am to LSUFanHouston
It’s not managed by the credit union, they are just selling it.
It will have little details to it that make it 10x better than a dealer warranty on average
It will have little details to it that make it 10x better than a dealer warranty on average
Posted on 12/8/22 at 6:06 am to Penn
I’ve found both the warranty’s and the gap insurance are significantly less than a dealerships pricing for essentially the same thing. Huge markups from dealers on warranty’s. I’d toss out an off to the dealer and see if they bite. I’ve literally gotten some down from $1800 to about half of that before.
Posted on 12/8/22 at 7:08 am to Hornetjames3
The only warranties I buy if I buy one is one from the manufacturer. Talk them down. Also certain brands any dealer including online can sell you one. I find the best brands for this are Ford and Honda.
Posted on 12/8/22 at 8:01 am to Hornetjames3
On a side note, why buy an 8-year extended warranty at purchase? Since you already have a manufacturer’s warranty of 3-5 years with the car purchase, isn’t the extended warranty just a duplicate charge for those 3-5 years and you’re paying for just the years after the original warranty expires? If you want true extended warranty, why not buy once your original expires? I don’t know and am just asking. I have never bought an extended warranty before.
This post was edited on 12/8/22 at 8:13 am
Posted on 12/8/22 at 8:07 am to Hornetjames3
I think the quality of the warranty would depend more on the company providing rather than who sells it. Read the fine print on both and compare.
Personally, I doubt I'll ever buy one. They're the experts on what breaks and when, and you're betting them that they're wrong.
I don't recall ever spending over $1000 on a passenger car repair in my 40 years of owning cars. (other than a wreck that you already have insurance for)
If it breaks, whip out the credit card and fix it. If it doesn't, go eat at Ruth's 10 times.
Personally, I doubt I'll ever buy one. They're the experts on what breaks and when, and you're betting them that they're wrong.
I don't recall ever spending over $1000 on a passenger car repair in my 40 years of owning cars. (other than a wreck that you already have insurance for)
If it breaks, whip out the credit card and fix it. If it doesn't, go eat at Ruth's 10 times.
Posted on 12/8/22 at 8:08 am to Hornetjames3
Warranties are typically bad investments. But if you really want one, go with the dealership/manufacturer as I have heard 3rd party warranties try their best to not honor it.
Use Google for extended warranties, some dealerships offer them online for much cheaper.
Use Google for extended warranties, some dealerships offer them online for much cheaper.
This post was edited on 12/8/22 at 8:11 am
Posted on 12/8/22 at 9:39 am to 21JumpStreet
quote:
Use Google for extended warranties, some dealerships offer them online for much cheaper.
this. i purchased one for my vehicle for about half what my dealer wanted. i got it the month before the new warranty expired. extended the warranty for 2 extra years for essentially one more payment in my case.
Posted on 12/8/22 at 9:43 am to Hornetjames3
Extended car warranties by far and large are usually worthless. There's some scenarios I might consider getting one - a car I beat up on (high performance/sports car), or a knowingly unreliable brand/specific car. I will say newer cars are getting more and more ever complicated (hybrids, plug in hybrids, tech safety features, etc) and it seems like cars have more issues with the tech going into them now than cars from 10-20 years back.
I got my 2014 Honda Accord brand new in 2014 and have put just under 90k miles on it and not a single thing has gone wrong with it in over 8 years and those almost 90k miles a warranty would have covered.
to even consider one again it would be a certain vehicle and if the regular warranty period wasn't great. I mean even Kias/Hyundais arent that well built but still come with like 10 year 100k mile powertrain warranties. On top of that, how many people are driving out cars to 10 years or more? I bet a lot of folks even buying extended warranties dont always drive the cars out that long.
I got my 2014 Honda Accord brand new in 2014 and have put just under 90k miles on it and not a single thing has gone wrong with it in over 8 years and those almost 90k miles a warranty would have covered.
to even consider one again it would be a certain vehicle and if the regular warranty period wasn't great. I mean even Kias/Hyundais arent that well built but still come with like 10 year 100k mile powertrain warranties. On top of that, how many people are driving out cars to 10 years or more? I bet a lot of folks even buying extended warranties dont always drive the cars out that long.
This post was edited on 12/8/22 at 9:46 am
Posted on 12/8/22 at 10:20 am to thunderbird1100
I have a new jeep hybrid. My first any kind of electric car ever. I leased it for three years and if I end up buying it after I’ll damn sure be buying the lease. No telling what a new batter will run on these things and they haven’t been out long enough to have any statistical data on how well they hold up. Usually I don’t buy them but as shite gets more complicated than a clutch or a starter, it starts making a little sense IF you can get the right one at the right price.
Posted on 12/8/22 at 10:21 am to Hornetjames3
Depends on what company the credit union uses. Most of the time, it's a shite company like car shield that wants to low ball and not pay for majority of repairs or will find a way to get out of paying for it in general.
Most dealer warranties by and large are good and will pay for majority if not all of the repairs I find.
Example:
Check engine light is on and #3 ignition coil pack is bad. Most shop will charge a diag of 1 hour and say .7 to 1 hour replacement and check after.
Dealer warranty will pretty much pay for it all minus your deductible.
After market (Carshield) pays .3 diag and maybe half hour for replacement and test after. On top of you having to cover your deductible. Also, part markup is gonna be something stupid like 10-15%. Any shop is gonna charge you the remaining balance.
Hope this helps.
Most dealer warranties by and large are good and will pay for majority if not all of the repairs I find.
Example:
Check engine light is on and #3 ignition coil pack is bad. Most shop will charge a diag of 1 hour and say .7 to 1 hour replacement and check after.
Dealer warranty will pretty much pay for it all minus your deductible.
After market (Carshield) pays .3 diag and maybe half hour for replacement and test after. On top of you having to cover your deductible. Also, part markup is gonna be something stupid like 10-15%. Any shop is gonna charge you the remaining balance.
Hope this helps.
Posted on 12/8/22 at 11:12 am to thunderbird1100
We got the extended warranty on a 2019 Pathfinder that we bought with 20K of miles on it. It is through LDS (Louisiana Dealer Services). Cost was $1,800.
It has about 50K miles on it now. Over the last few months, the driver window and the back up camera have been acting up. Brought it in for warranty work. Cost was about $1300 to fix it all. We paid $100 deductible.
We will see if we need any more warranty work before 100K miles.
I probablu would *not* have bought it, but it's the wife's car and she wanted it for "piece of mind". She pays for it... and it wasn't worth fighting with her.
It has about 50K miles on it now. Over the last few months, the driver window and the back up camera have been acting up. Brought it in for warranty work. Cost was about $1300 to fix it all. We paid $100 deductible.
We will see if we need any more warranty work before 100K miles.
I probablu would *not* have bought it, but it's the wife's car and she wanted it for "piece of mind". She pays for it... and it wasn't worth fighting with her.
Posted on 12/10/22 at 8:45 am to LSUFanHouston
I had the same great experience with LDS. I bought a used F250 and they covered all my repairs without any issues. I only paid my $100 deductible.
Posted on 12/10/22 at 8:52 am to Penn
I buy my warranty from credit union who uses Route 66. I buy 2 year old certified use cars with no more than 20000 miles. Have 2 years warranty left and add 4 more years up to 100000 miles. Historically I had no problem with Route 66 and my service provider accepts them and gives them high marks.
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