dbforthree
New Member
- Joined
- May 18, 2021
- Messages
- 3
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New to the forums, but looking to join the Stinger family after a few months of researching the car and going through some test drives. With the 2022 refresh, most know the GT trim is gone, and thus the least expensive way to attain the V6 was removed (such a shame!). However, the 4-cylinder received a non-trivial upgrade making the GT-line a much more fun car to drive, in my opinion, than the '18-'21 models. Having recently driven a AWD '22 GT-line (w/ Sun+Sound) and AWD '21 GT (no packages), I am pretty torn between the two (new) cars with both in the MSRP range of $42K-$43K.
The '22 GT-line w/ Sound+Sun has been much harder to move the price on, albeit at a different dealership. The salesman is not moving at all from MSRP (beyond Kia incentives), despite the Stinger being a relatively slow car on the sales front, but this experience seems to jive with what Truecar reports in my region (average sale discount of 0.5% off MSRP), as well as various anecdotal '22 Stinger dealership experiences I've read on here.
After some negotiation on the '21 GT, the first price cut knocked it down to ~$39.5K (with Kia incentives + dealership discount), which frankly I was pretty surprised by. I am based in the northeast US, and this is nearly in Truecar "excellent" territory with minimal haggling. I honestly wish I had asked for more off given how easy it was to get here. Would you folks consider this a competitive price given that we haven't started the conversation on trade-in/finance? Perhaps I am missing something with this car and trim, but it seems to have great reviews and I wonder why the dealership is so eager to competitively price it. They have the last two '21 Stinger GTs within 200 miles of me, so they likely know I can't go anywhere else to get this particular car.
Appreciate your time!
The '22 GT-line w/ Sound+Sun has been much harder to move the price on, albeit at a different dealership. The salesman is not moving at all from MSRP (beyond Kia incentives), despite the Stinger being a relatively slow car on the sales front, but this experience seems to jive with what Truecar reports in my region (average sale discount of 0.5% off MSRP), as well as various anecdotal '22 Stinger dealership experiences I've read on here.
After some negotiation on the '21 GT, the first price cut knocked it down to ~$39.5K (with Kia incentives + dealership discount), which frankly I was pretty surprised by. I am based in the northeast US, and this is nearly in Truecar "excellent" territory with minimal haggling. I honestly wish I had asked for more off given how easy it was to get here. Would you folks consider this a competitive price given that we haven't started the conversation on trade-in/finance? Perhaps I am missing something with this car and trim, but it seems to have great reviews and I wonder why the dealership is so eager to competitively price it. They have the last two '21 Stinger GTs within 200 miles of me, so they likely know I can't go anywhere else to get this particular car.
Appreciate your time!