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Thinking about your
options for disposing of your existing car is an important step,
especially after you decide to buy a new car. After all, the value
of your current car may be in the eye of the beholder, but that
value has an effect on your buying power.
Fortunately, the Internet
opens a world of options to help you maximize the price you get
for your car when you dispose of it. Whether you want to sell,
trade, donate, or even junk your car, making sure that you get
the best value from your automobile is worthwhile.
In this chapter, we
show you how to surf the Internet to find dozens of disposal options
and the right one that meets your budget and your tax needs.
We drive you around the Web and make pit stops at some of the
most innovative disposal opportunities available ones that
you need to know about to maximize the value of your trade-in.
We also show you where
to find the best online classified advertising, tell you why Internet
auctions may prove the right way for you to find the right buyer,
and explore alternative disposal options, including barter sites
that enable you to trade your car for something else and bona
fide charity organizations that offer tax receipts for your old
clunker.
Determining How
Much Your Car Is Worth
REMEMBER
How much is your car worth? Now, that's a good question
and one that you need to answer before you can think of selling
or otherwise disposing of your used car online! Of course, the
value of a car fluctuates because of several variables, some of
them within your control and some that are out of your control,
as the following paragraphs explain. All those variables are worth
taking into account as you price your car.
For starters, the way
you've maintained your car during the time you've owned it is
important. Although the caveat "let the buyer beware"
is never more true than when buying a used car, keep in mind that
the better you've maintained your car, the more it's worth. The
same is true of low mileage. A high-mileage car is simply worth
less than one with a smaller number on its odometer. Finally,
how you drive a car can affect its value. Although auto technicians
can do miraculous repair work these days, a repaired car is still
not as desirable as a never-been-wrecked vehicle.
The variables you have
little or no control over include what options the car has (power
windows, automatic transmission, and so on), what model year the
car is, and what type of car you have. We wish we could tell you
that you can use the Internet to turn a 1978 Chevette into a 2000
Corvette (what a difference two letters makes!), but that just
isn't so.
The Bible of used cars
is the Kelley Blue Book. You can buy the book itself through an
online bookstore, such as Amazon.com,
Borders.com, or BarnesandNoble.com,
or you can go directly to the Kelley Blue Book Web site (at www.kbb.com)
to check out a wealth of information about every car model imaginable.
You can use the information that you find online as a base to
figure out what your car may be worth.
Edmunds.com (at www.edmunds.com)
is a similar service that bases its information on a popular line
of books. The Web site does a nice job with its valuation of all
used car models, offering detailed evaluations and both trade-in
and market prices. A car's trade-in price - what a dealer is likely
to give you for the car if you trade it in for a newer model -
is lower than its market price. A car's market price is lingo
for the price at which a dealer expects to sell the car to an
individual.
CarPrices.com (at www.carprices.com)
is another great place to find out how much your car is worth.
Click the Used Cars button on the home page of this Web site to
access a section that enables you to check a trade-in's value
by make and model. This site offers both a wholesale and retail
value for the car of your choice.
Taking an Online
Tour of Your Disposal Options
Time spent on the Internet
is time well spent if you figure out from your online forays how
to get the best value out of your existing car. Your choices vary,
and you can make your decision easier by thoroughly exploring
your online options. If you can discover what kind of market exists
for your car, you can tap into it effectively. Some cars are much
prized in the used-car market. Others are perfect only for the
junkyard but worth a tax deduction if you donate them to
a worthwhile charity. All you need is the knowledge of where to
find these resources, and that's what we show you in the followin
sections.
Online newspaper
classifieds
Most newspapers across
North America and elsewhere contain classified advertisements.
Many newspapers, in fact, rely on the income that classified ads
generate to support their news-gathering activities.
As newspapers struggle
to find their place in the Internet era, many of them find posting
their classified sections online useful. This practice enables
you, as a vehicle seller, to consult various classified sections
online to compare what other sellers are asking for cars similar
to yours. You can also use the Internet to place your ad.
TIPS!
Two key Web sites are worth bookmarking to provide you with direct
access to most newspapers in the world. Bourque Newswatch (at
www.bourque.com) provides
direct access to hundreds of American and Canadian newspapers
from one easy-to-navigate home page. OnlineNewspapers.com (at
www.onlinenewspapers.com)
is a more complex Web site full of listings for major newspapers
from around the world.
These two URLs alone
plug you into almost every key newspaper that you can find on
the Internet. And in these newspapers, you can find tens of thousands
of newspaper classified ads for cars online.
Here's an example: From the Bourque Web site, we recently accessed
the Arkansas Democrat Gazette (at www.arclerngaz.com)
to consult its classified ads - just click the Classified Ads
button. There, we easily found the automotive page by clicking
the Automotive link, and typing the word Chevrolet into its simple-to-use
search engine. In an instant, we received details about hundreds
of Chevrolets for sale, including model, year of manufacture,
features, and asking price. This method is a terrific way to find
out what others are asking for cars similar to yours.
Next, we consulted
the paper's Info & E-mail page (just click the Info &
E-mail button), which gave us all the information we needed to
submit our own classified ad. This section of the site even enables
you to use an online form to submit the ad directly to the paper's
Classifieds department. Many other newspapers, from The Miami
Herald (at www.herald.com)
to the Toronto Star (at www.thestar.com),
work along similar lines.
TIP!
Given the incredible reach of the Internet, visiting several newspapers
online within your geographical area to compare both car prices
and ad costs is always worthwhile. By finding out what prices
people are asking for cars similar to yours, you can make sure
that you get a fair price for your old jalopy. And by comparing
ad prices, you can make sure that you're not paying too much to
place an ad.
Online-only classifieds
A number of independent online used car Web sites have recently
set up shop as e-commerce operations. They thrive exclusively
online and are well worth considering as a potential place to
list your car for sale because they contain many more listings
than newspaper classifieds do, and they reach a larger number
of prospective buyers.
AutoTrader.com (at
www.autotrader.com) is
one such place. This Web site bills itself as the worlds largest
selection of used cars with "more than 1.5 million listings,
updated daily".
What we love about AutoTrader.com is that it enables you to list
your car for sale for free. Obtaining that free listing is a simple
six-step process:
Select Your Make, Select Your Model, Enter the Year and Price,
Enter the Description, Enhance Your Listing, and Enter Your Personal
Information. After your entry is satisfactory to you, submit it
and wait for a buyer. (You can modify or remove your listing at
any time.)
America Online (at www.aol.com)
offers its own classifieds: ClassifiedsPlus. Users benefit from
access to the world's biggest online community. You can access
the classifieds section directly off the main AOL home page by
clicking the Classifieds link. From there, AOL prompts you to
follow a Place Your Ad link to the Place an Ad page. From there,
click the Vehicles link; this takes you to a page from which you
can choose categories ranging from motorcycles to RVs to parts.
The drawback here is that when you click the Used Cars link, you're
sent to AutoTrader.com. Still, the combination of an AOL-AutoTrader
linkup is a powerful siren call for your ad placement.
Trader Online (at www.traderonline.com)
is another great classifieds Web site. As a supplement to the
Trader newspapers that you can buy at news-stands, Trader Online
offers for sale cars, trucks, boats, RVs, and more just
about any mode of motorized travel you can think of. To sell your
car for free, click the Autos tab (or whichever of the others
best describes the vehicle you have for sale) and then click the
FREE classified listing link. This site also offers a link to
the Kelley Blue Book site so that you can determine a fair price
for your car.
AutoWeb.com (at www.autoweb.com),
in affiliation with UsedCar.com (at www.usedcar.com), charges
a monthly fee and promises that your ad is going to "reach
three million potential car buyers a month." A bonus is that
your AutoWeb listing is also posted on Yahoo!'s classifieds page
(at automobiles.classifieds.yahoo.com)
for additional exposure.
WorldWideWheels.com (at www.heels.com
on the Web) bills itself as the "most comprehensive automobile
site on the Net." You can place used car ads here, with or
without a photo, for free, and the listing process takes just
one or two seconds. All you do is click the Place a Free Ad link,
click the ad form link, and fill in the requested information.
You must renew the process every three weeks, however, to ensure
that the listing continues; this requirement helps Web operators
keep track of which cars are still for sale.
CarShoppers.com (at www.carshoppers.com)
also offers free classified ads with photos. You must be a member
of this site to use it, but membership is free.
AutoNetUSA.com (at www.autonetusa.com)
is another interesting Web site. It promises the buyer "a
faster, easier way of shopping for a new or used vehicle."
And anything that enables a buyer to find your car more easily
is well worth taking a look at.
CarPrices.com (at www.carprices.com)
is also open to members, and its membership is free. During our
recent visit, new members were enticed to sign up with an offer
of free long-distance telephone service. This Web site offers
a simple-to-use ad placement form for the seller, and buyers can
enjoy the ease of searching for specific used cars.
On a much smaller scale, the Automotive Database Web site (at
www.vaxxine.com/adbase/)
lists both vehicles for sale and vehicles that people want. Users
not only can browse, but also can post ads in both sections. The
listing for each particular car is rudimentary, and interested
parties contact the seller directly through e-mail. Although not
the vastest archive of vehicles, this site's user-friendliness
is attractive.
REMEMBER!
Online classifieds offer you a great way to get your car out into
the open marketplace. But that open marketplace is highly competitive
and contains many, many listings from just about everywhere. Consider
the key selling points of your particular car and use them in
your ad to highlight why a buyer wants to choose your car instead
of someone else's similar offering.
TIP!
Because many locations offer free ad placements, you may want
to try posting your ad at several sites to ensure maximum exposure.
AutoTrader.com, WorldWideWheels.com, and CarPrices.com are good
choices.
Online auctions
Some of the most popular
e-commerce operations on the Internet are auction sites. Operations
such as eBay.com (www.ebay.com),
Bid.com (www.Bid.com), and a
host of others attract millions of loyal users. Some observers
think that online auctions may one day replace classifieds as
the medium of choice for the majority in selling and buying between
individuals.
You can find many different types of auctions online:
- Regular auctions, or English auctions, are the most popular.
Generally, buyers bid on an item until the auction ends, and the
item sells to the highest bidder at the end of the auction. If
a seller lists an item with a minimum reserve price, this ensures
that the product doesn't sell for less than a buyer's lowest sale
price. Using a reserve bid ensures that you, as a seller, don't
need to sell at a price below your comfort level.
- Dutch auctions, on the other hand, are a little trickier. In
Dutch auctions, two or more identical items are put up for bid;
all winning bidders pay an identical price, which is the lowest
successful bid. This form of auction doesn't really suit the sale
of your car online, as only one successful bidder can buy your
car.
- Some online sites hold other forms of auctions. Lycos, for example,
offers Quick Win auctions. In such an auction, the first bidder
to meet your asking price buys the item.
Most online auction
houses require that you register as a member or user. Generally,
membership is free, and you must agree to a binding agreement
with respect to terms of use.
We suggest that you start out at eBay, which is possibly the world's
biggest and best-known Internet auction site. This Web site attracts
millions of users and offers a vast array of products for auction
at any given time of the day. The eBay site boasts a new automotive
section, too one of the slickest we've seen. During a recent
visit, the site (at www.ebaymotors.com)
featured an auction for Queen Wilhelmina's rare 1946 Daimler limousine.
But don't worry if your car is slightly less glitzy. At eBay,
you can find room for every kind of car imaginable. (Remember
also to check out eBay's tips on how to sell online by clicking
the How to sell button.)
CityAuction's Web site (at www.Utrade.com) also displays a lot
of effervescence. Buyers and sellers meet here to exchange everything
from Barbie dolls to BMWs. This site also enables sellers to sign
up for FairMatch, a daily e-mail notification service that keeps
you up to speed about prospective buyers.
A number of lesser-known
auction sites ply their trade exclusively online, and one of these
may well prove perfect for your needs:
- AuctionAddict.com (at www.auctionadctict.com)
is an independent Web site that generates a fair amount of action.
It thinks of itself as "a huge Internet swap meet" and
makes listings available to anyone who registers for a free site
membership. The service is free to the buyer, although the site
charges a small commission to the seller but only if the
product sells at auction. Whether you're selling a convertible,
coupe, hatchback, street rod, or racing vehicle, a buyer may well
be lurking at this site just waiting for your auction to begin.
- ReverseAuction.com (at www.ra-vehicles.com)
presents an intriguing pitch and charges no bidding or buying
fees. It offers "online bidding in reverse for old and new
cars.., our prices drop instead of rise, and you can watch this
process live on your screen." This site specializes in auctioning
antique and classic cars, such as classic Chevrolets and Corvettes.
The site collects fees from the seller and is open to members
only, although registration is available to everyone except minors.
In their quest to be
all things to as many people as possible, several top search engine
portals operate popular online auction sites:
- Yahoo! Auctions (at auctions.yahoo.com)
are quite popular. Check out the Seller Guide to discover the
rules and what you need to know to register yourself for a Yahoo!
ID. Next, click the Automotive link on the main page to access
the auctions area, where we recently noted that more than 2,500
car auctions were underway during our one visit. A 1998 Porsche
Carrera had two bids, one topping $50,000, while a 1965 Thunderbird
had six bids, the highest at just $2,000.
- Lycos' auction site (at auctions.lycos.com)
is one of the biggest in this category. Lycos offers listings
for everything from Beanie Babies to gold coins, and the site
auctions thousands of vehicles, too. The Lycos auctions require
both buyers and sellers to register.
- Amazon.com (at www.amazon.com)
is also in the auction game now. Best known as "Earth's Biggest
Bookstore," the online monolith is branching out into the
sale of a wide variety of goods. Click the Auctions tab on the
main page to visit its Auctions page, and then click the Cars
& Transportation link to access a page of auctions for cars,
parts, and automotive paraphernalia. You need an Amazon.com account
to list your car for auction.
For more information
about online auctions, check out Internet Auctions For Dummies
and CliffsNotes Buying and Selling on eBay, both published by
IDG
Books Worldwide, Inc.
Other online disposal options (If you can't get cash)
If you just can't seem
to find a buyer who's willing or able to pay cash for your old
faithful, you may want to consider other options for disposing
of your vehicle online. Two possibilities are to trade
or barter your car for something else, or simply to donate
it to charity, as the following sections describe.
Trading your car
for something else by bartering
What are your options
if you can't find a buyer for your car with the cash to pay for
it? Consider trading it for something else, such as a canoe, a
couch, or even a drum set. Trade4lt.Net (at www.trade4it.net)
is "where one man's junk is another man's treasure."
This site is free to buyers, who can wheel and deal and pitch
you just about anything imaginable in exchange for your car. Sellers
or those with items for which they want to barter
can set up an account for $9.95 per month to post an unlimited
number of listings.
Expect the
online barter market to explode over the next year. Other sites,
such as CarBarter.com (www.carbarter.com), Barter.com (www.barter.com),
Barter.net (www.barter.net),
and Barter.ca(www.barter.ca.com),
aren't yet operational at the time of this writing. But expect
many of them to erupt online this year with their own barter systems.
Donating your used
car on the Internet
Hauling that clunker to the local junkyard may end up being
the only option left in the life of your car. But wait! Have you
thought about donating it to a charitable organization in exchange
for a legal IRS tax deduction?
Vehicle Donation Processing
Center, Inc. (at www.donating-a-useci-car.com),
acts as a middleman for charities seeking vehicle donations. This
service covers many of America's largest urban centers, and it
isn't picky about whether the car actually works. Its "main
function is to provide a revenue stream for charities in need
of funding," which happens if it can sell a car for more
than the cost of the towing. Visit the site's list of participating
charities, consult the categories of vehicles it's willing to
accept, and apply online. (Notice that the service doesn't accept
cars that are more than 15 years old.)
WARNING!
Although we demonstrate a wide variety of options open to you
online as a car seller in this chapter, you always need to keep
in mind whom the buyer is and how he intends to pay you for your
car. Never sell merely on the promise of a vague future payment.
In other words, make sure that you receive your payment before
you hand over the ownership and the keys to your car. There are
many scam artists out there, and because of the anonymity a person
has through the Web, it's important to be cautious when selling
any item online.
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