Search Smart Spending:

Job worries? Hyundai has a deal for you

Posted Jan 05 2009, 11:38 AM by Karen Datko
Rating:

Are you confident that the ailing economy will rebound quickly? Apparently Hyundai is betting that you aren't. Under the new Hyundai Assurance plan, if you buy or lease a new Hyundai and lose your job within a year, you can take the car back without credit hassles.

Depending on what the car is worth at the time, you may not even owe another dime.

This may be what it takes to get nervous buyers into showrooms. Of course, there are a few little hitches in this unusual marketing approach. Among them:

  • The Hyundai Assurance benefit is worth up to $7,500 and is based on Hyundai's determination of what your vehicle is worth "based on the average of your dealer's appraisal and the values from leading industry guides," the company says. That amount is applied to what you owe. You pay the difference if it's more than that.
  • You have to finance or lease the car to qualify.
  • The offer is limited to those who involuntarily lose their job, get transferred overseas, become disabled, lose their driver's license due to physical impairment, are self-employed and file for bankruptcy -- or accidentally die.

Robert Farago at The Truth About Cars wrote about Hyundai Assurance and got plenty of feedback from readers. Many said it sounds like a good deal.

"One of the reasons why consumers have cut back spending so much is fear of what will happen in the future and this program tries to address that," reader "Acd" wrote. "... It certainly stands out among the clutter of toe-tag-athon clearance events."

Some readers said that considering the depreciation of Hyundais, $7,500 would probably cover what you owe if your down payment was a decent amount.

"Excellent marketing," "Buickman" said. "Something GM will never learn."

Related reading:

Who makes the highest-quality cars?

Auto sales crash and burn

Car sales: The Achilles heel of auto bailout

GMAC is giving your money to subprime buyers

Comments

 

Poor Cliff don't realize Poor Ed has sold GM vehicles for over 25 years and poor Cliff don't have all "his" facts

Well said Ed.  I totally agree we need AMERICAN industry, but we AMERICANS need to get back to reality.  We the american people have done this to ourselves.  Yes, I'll say it again we did this to ourselves with our unions and demanding higher and higher wages and more and more benfits.  I say get rid of the unions and we can fix a whole lot more and get ourselves back to reality. And maybe we can even get some of our industry back into our own country.  It's sad when other countries make it and sell it at lesser prices than we can here in the USA!

So. don't buy car . learn to live in a public transportation environment. Do yourself a favor and buy a bike. For Long distance shopping use public trans short distance use bike. As far as GM goes they will not get any support until get rid off union.

Poor Ed also has never tried to take a vehicle back to GM and ask them to eat $7,500 without ponying up for good ol' fashioned "croak 'n choke" insurance at the F&I table first.  Yet another "Bail 'em out!" lemming who likes the way it sounds without ever thinking about the practicalities behiind it.

And Poor Daryl (and his other brother Daryl) apparently didn't take the time to read the program specifications before piping up, the kind of know-it-none "just because I CAN have an opinion, I'm GOING to have one..." ignorance that's led to everyone who bought homes beyond their wallet and intellect that I and others are now taxed to bail-out.

To put it in terms that even Daryl can understand, if the difference between what you owe and the fair appraisal value is less than $7,500.00, you walk away without damage to your credit history or any future liability.

Yes, this kind of insurance has always been available, albeit at a substantial fee that the Finance department tries to sell as a high-commission (and high priced) add-on.  What Hyundai has figured out is that rather than trying to use it to suck extra dollars from each sale, it can be given away as a valuable sales incentive when wrapped-up in the right ribbon and bow.  Kudos to Hyundai for creating the kind of perceived value that GM and Chrysler have yet to grasp as a concept.

Car_Fan...do you realize US has one of the worst Public trans systems in the world. Not sure where you live but riding a bike short distance you might get killed with the drivers we have in NC

On Christmas eve night my nephew was in an accident in a Hyuandi Tuscon his wife and his unborn children(twins) were killed and he is still in ICU. I would not drive one of these death traps if you gave it to me. I"ll stick with American steel thanks anyway.

poor Ed wants to keep his job!! Who says car sales people are not biased, huh?

Maybe you should jump the Titanic called the american auto industry???

Hyundai  is doing this buy back but you can take any car back to any dealership and they should give you the black book value of the car. I've done it before with a Honda. They tried to low ball me, but when I told them all I wanted was the black book price they bought it back from me. Black book is what the dealerships buy their cars for at auctions and how they appraise your cars value.

ok first off, for those of you who "claim" GM or any other company will unreluctantly take an unpaid car off a buyer's hands, tell me what dealer, and I want your signature on the paperwork, and I will sign it.  

Secondly, if you can provide me a better-made vehicle than Hyundai, I will sell my GM to Hyundai, as that way the US wins too (once again, with your signature on the deal).

I am asking all CEOs of the big three to sponsor me on this....any takers?

ok first off, for those of you who "claim" GM or any other company will unreluctantly take an unpaid car off a buyer's hands, tell me what dealer, and I want your signature on the paperwork, and I will sign it.  

Secondly, if you can provide me a better-made vehicle than Hyundai, I will sell my GM to Hyundai, as that way the US wins too (once again, with your signature on the deal).

I am asking all CEOs of the big three to sponsor me on this....any takers?

Send a Comment

Comments must be directly related to the blog entry. Comments with offensive language will be deleted. Your e-mail address won't be displayed.

(please, no HTML tags. Web addresses will be hyperlinked):