My friend is REALLY interested in buying a Prius Prime but he wants to finance because he saw the 0% being offered by Toyota Question is, is this just a bate and switch or do most Toyota dealerships actually honor this? He has excellent credit. FICO score over 800 or are they going to bring up a random reason at the end to say they can't offer 0%. Are there other costs he should be aware of (like $10 for every $1000 borrowed, etc)? Can he put $0 down? Thanks for anyone with experience with Toyota's financing.
I bought a 2017 Four Touring a couple of months ago with $0 down and 0% financing through Toyota Motor Credit. The only catch is that I had to give up the $2,000 rebate that they were offering at the time. I needed to choose between that and the 0% financing, but it really was a no-brainer, because even if I had financed at their next lowest rate, the total financing charges were more than $2,000. It is easy enough to check that your friend is really getting 0% financing. Just make sure that the total number of payments times the monthly payment is equal to the out-the-door selling price. From their ad, 72 X $13.89 = $1,000.08, so the offer really is for 0% financing, give or take a few cents rounding error.
Oh yeah, and the U.S. is also still in the dinosaur era with miles, gallons, daylight savings time and all that other nonsense. Of course you Brits have nothing to brag about with your pounds, shillings, stones, the Queen, bla, bla, and your driving on the wrong side of the road! Oh, and you still can't cook!! My dad would have told ya!! I'm sorry, but I believe the French have got it all together: no pounds, no miles, they drive on the correct side of the road, and they have good food!! They love Ferraris too!! .
So do you, just in a different wrong pattern. My computer files sort best when formatted as year-month-day.
If you're referring to this cornered Franco-Californian suffering from 95° Fahrenheit ludicrous heat on Thanksgiving, YES, I'm melting! I'm melting! Aaaaawwwwww!!! .
Here in NJ we had the choice of .9% or $3500 back. Quick bit of math on the calculator showed the $3500 was the better deal.