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Dealer Financing vs Pre-Approved Loans: The Honest Math

ME

Written by

Michael Ecke

Founder & Editor-in-Chief

Reviewed by

CarSavr Editorial Team

Last updated:

8 min read

Dealers mark up wholesale APRs by 1–3 points ("reserve"). Pre-approval kills the markup — but the dealer's offer occasionally is the better deal. Here's how to tell.

Dealer Financing vs Pre-Approved Loans: The Honest Math

The dealer reserve is real money

When a dealer "shops your application" with their captive lenders, the lender quotes a wholesale rate (called "buy rate"). The dealer adds a markup — usually 1–3 percentage points — and pockets the difference as commission.

That markup is called dealer reserve. On a $30,000 loan over 60 months at +2 points, the buyer pays an extra $1,700 in interest. The dealer gets that $1,700 as a flat or trailing commission.

When pre-approval saves you money

In ~85% of cases, walking in with a pre-approval from an outside lender (bank, credit union, or online aggregator) saves money. You either:

  • Use the outside loan as-is, OR
  • Force the dealer to beat your rate (cutting the reserve to zero)

Either way, you win.

When dealer financing actually beats your pre-approval

  • Manufacturer subvented rates: 0% APR or 1.9% APR promos from the manufacturer's captive finance arm (Ford Credit, Toyota Financial Services, etc.) often beat any outside loan. But they typically require forgoing a $1,500–$4,500 cash rebate — run the math both ways.
  • Manufacturer cash + low APR combo: Rare but exists. Read the fine print on every promo.
  • Loyalty financing: Existing GM/Honda/etc. customers sometimes get a 0.5% rate discount the dealer won't volunteer.

The five-step play

  1. Get pre-approved from an outside lender (soft pull).
  2. Negotiate the car price first — never mention financing.
  3. Once the price is fixed, hand over the pre-approval.
  4. Let F&I try to beat it. If they can — and the cash rebate isn't sacrificed — take their offer.
  5. If they can't, use your outside loan and walk out with the car.

What to never do

  • Sign on payment instead of total price (the dealer adjusts the term to disguise reserve markup).
  • Accept the first F&I offer without comparing.
  • Skip the disclosure boxes — the APR is what you actually pay, not the "rate" advertised on the showroom floor.

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