Car dealerships are one of the most complained-about industries in consumer advocacy. From hidden fees and deceptive financing to bait-and-switch tactics and undisclosed damage, dealership problems cost consumers billions per year. Here's how to fight back.
Common Dealership Scams and Tactics
- Yo-yo financing: You drive off the lot, then the dealer calls saying financing fell through and you need to sign a worse deal
- Hidden fees: Documentation fees ($500-1,000), "market adjustments," nitrogen tire fills, VIN etching at inflated prices
- Undisclosed damage: Selling a car with accident history not on the CarFax
- Packed payments: Monthly payment includes add-ons you didn't agree to (extended warranty, GAP, paint protection)
- Spot delivery scam: You take the car home before financing is finalized, creating pressure to accept worse terms
- Bait and switch: Advertising a car at a price that doesn't exist when you arrive
Step-by-Step: Fight Back
Step 1: Review Your Paperwork
Go through every page you signed:
- Compare the final price to what was negotiated
- Look for add-ons you didn't agree to (extended warranty, paint protection, LoJack)
- Check the interest rate against what you were quoted
- Calculate the total cost (monthly payment × months + down payment) vs. the advertised price
Step 2: Contact the Dealer
Start with the dealership directly:
- Ask for the sales manager or general manager
- Be specific: "My contract includes [item] at $[amount] that I did not agree to"
- Request removal of unwanted add-ons and a revised contract
- Get everything in writing
Step 3: Cancel Add-Ons
Most dealership add-ons can be canceled after purchase:
- Extended warranty: Typically cancelable within 30-60 days for a full refund
- GAP insurance: Usually cancelable with prorated refund
- Paint/fabric protection: Often cancelable
- Tire and wheel protection: Usually cancelable
- The refund goes to your loan balance, reducing what you owe
Step 4: Escalate
If the dealer won't cooperate:
- Manufacturer complaint: Contact the car manufacturer's customer service. Dealers are franchisees and manufacturers can pressure them.
- State attorney general: File a consumer protection complaint
- State DMV or dealer licensing board: Dealerships are licensed by the state
- CFPB: For financing issues, file at consumerfinance.gov
- FTC: For deceptive advertising and practices
- BBB: Creates a public record
Step 5: Legal Options
- State consumer protection laws: Many states have auto dealer-specific protections
- Lemon law: If the car itself is defective
- Small claims court: For amounts within your state's limit
- Attorney: For significant losses, a consumer protection attorney may take the case on contingency
Quick Checklist
- [ ] Review every page of your purchase paperwork
- [ ] Identify unauthorized add-ons or price discrepancies
- [ ] Contact the sales or general manager
- [ ] Cancel unwanted add-ons within the cancelation window
- [ ] File complaints with state AG, DMV, and manufacturer
- [ ] File CFPB complaint for financing issues
- [ ] Consult a consumer protection attorney for large losses
Bottom Line
Most dealership scams rely on consumers not reading their paperwork or not knowing they can cancel add-ons after the sale. Review your contract immediately, cancel any unwanted products within the cancellation window, and file regulatory complaints if the dealer won't cooperate. Manufacturers and state regulators are your strongest allies.
Sources
- FTC — auto dealer consumer protection guidelines
- Consumer Financial Protection Bureau — auto financing complaint data
- State attorney general offices — auto dealer complaint processes