Some of you have sold your Newmars in the past and gotten new Newmars. I'm curious when the time comes, that time is not now for me, how you figure out what your price is going to be to list your coach. How do mods play in? HWH Active Air, Solar, LED lighting, Electric Tank Valves, etc. etc. It seems people sell their coaches pretty fast so they seem to be pricing properly. What's the reference, tips for selling, etc.?
My wife and I just ordered a new DS 4081 to replace our ‘17 DS 4018. We did our deal on the new coach and got the normal miserable trade-in offer from the dealer.
I realize it’s way too early for you to order a 2027 Essex, but when the time comes, I personally don’t believe that any mod the old coach has will have much impact on resale. Well, maybe the HWH Active Air.
In the case of a dealer trade-in, I suspect many mods might even have a negative impact. JMHO.
Since we were not too eager to accept our dealer’s lowball offer, we decided to try to sell the coach ourselves. We were under a considerable time crunch, since coaches do not appreciate and if the NAADA value were to take a plunge, that might also impact our trade deal.
We turned to RV Trader and placed a quick ad. I selected their medium priced deal, $80 for sixty days. My window to get the deal done was way shorter than 60 days.
The deal allowed for 20 pictures so I uploaded these along with some verbiage about our coach.
We had purchased this 2017 off the dealer’s lot. It had almost all the normal options, no specials, and no mods. The one big option it was lacking was heated floors.
Now the big question. What to price it.
I searched RV Trader and determined that there were over 400 Dutch Stars for sale on the site. So I narrowed my search. Turns out there were 14 DS 4018’s dated from 2015 to 2018. So I zeroed in on these and studied the details. They were priced from a low of $259,900 to $319,000. Clearly, those on the high end were dreaming. It was easy to see that where the price was too high, the coaches were just sitting there - 30 days, 60 days, 90 days etc.
I decided that if I really wanted to move this thing, I had to go in low, so I listed at $247,500. This worked. In less than two weeks, I had 1,180 views and 12 contacts. Contact number nine bought the coach on day eleven for $242,000, cash wire transfer, sight unseen, no inspection.
I was not worried about any details because I knew the coach to be in perfect shape and, now that the new owner has had it for a few days, I’m sure he agrees.
My wife and I agreed to deliver the coach to our dealer which cut 250 miles off the buyer’s trip to pick up the coach. While not part of the deal, I had the dealer do a pro-wash on the outside and detail the inside.
While I don’t believe Specials or Mods have much impact on resale, that’s not true for Options. The first five folks who contacted me asked if it had heated floors. I had, of course, not addressed that in my listing. When I responded “no”, four of the five responded,“Well, that’s a deal killer.” So early-on I was concerned that one missing feature might trip us up, but it worked out in the end.
We closed the deal as an “In and Out” transaction with the assistance of our dealer. There was a small charge for this, but handling it in that fashion preserves a huge sales tax saving for us when we close on the purchase of our new coach.
Overall, we came out significantly better than had we traded the coach in to the dealer. Knowing the firm trade-in price beforehand helped in our pricing decision, since it put a firm “bottom” on the deal.