Inflated VW prices
Author
Discussion

aceofspades1

Original Poster:

330 posts

41 months

Tuesday 9th December
quotequote all
Why are VW prices so inflated?

I have owned several Golfs including the MK7.5 and they are nice enough but I cannot understand why the prices are so inflated.

£7k gets you an average mileage 10-year-old base spec Golf petrol, if you want a low mileage automatic you're looking at over £10k. If you want a higher spec car, make that another several thousand.

To add to that VW stealerships now want £1300+ for a cambelt and water pump change!


aceofspades1

Original Poster:

330 posts

41 months

Tuesday 9th December
quotequote all

aceofspades1

Original Poster:

330 posts

41 months

Tuesday 9th December
quotequote all

the-photographer

4,146 posts

196 months

Tuesday 9th December
quotequote all
Supply and demand?

You could look at SEAT or Skoda?

andrew-6xade

82 posts

23 months

Tuesday 9th December
quotequote all
Buying a Golf says nothing about you as a person - that's the appeal. Perceived VW reliability, loads of dealers, loads of independents, generally well trodden drivetrains.

AddyT.

330 posts

113 months

Tuesday 9th December
quotequote all
Wow that's strong money! The GTD may be priced how it is as the Mk7 is perceived to be better than the Mk8 equivalent. However, both you have posted seem pretty highly priced! What's the mileage on them? Must be low for both, surely? I have a 2016 Mk7 R with 64k miles with a good spec and that's not going to be on a VW forecourt for all that much more - my guess around £17k-ish.

South tdf

1,693 posts

215 months

Tuesday 9th December
quotequote all
aceofspades1 said:
Why are VW prices so inflated?

I have owned several Golfs including the MK7.5 and they are nice enough but I cannot understand why the prices are so inflated.

£7k gets you an average mileage 10-year-old base spec Golf petrol, if you want a low mileage automatic you're looking at over £10k. If you want a higher spec car, make that another several thousand.

To add to that VW stealerships now want £1300+ for a cambelt and water pump change!

Simple answer, dont buy a Volkswagen and if you do change the cam belt yourself.

itcaptainslow

4,352 posts

156 months

Tuesday 9th December
quotequote all
Easier said than done - by the look of it the 1.5 needs a plethora of special tools to change the cambelt, and I bet it's not the only engine in the range like that.

raspy

2,175 posts

114 months

Tuesday 9th December
quotequote all
the-photographer said:
Supply and demand?
As simple as this. People in the UK are keeping their cars for longer.

The average age of UK cars at the end of 2024 was almost 10 years old. That's the highest it has ever been.


Sheepshanks

38,505 posts

139 months

Tuesday 9th December
quotequote all
andrew-6xade said:
... loads of dealers,
The only good one in our area just got shut down.


The pricing of both of the cars above has a massive margin for dealers - they're both +50% on their WBAC valuations, and the dealers won't have paid more than that.

South tdf

1,693 posts

215 months

Tuesday 9th December
quotequote all
Sheepshanks said:
andrew-6xade said:
... loads of dealers,
The only good one in our area just got shut down.


The pricing of both of the cars above has a massive margin for dealers - they're both +50% on their WBAC valuations, and the dealers won't have paid more than that.
Here’s a plan, buy your car at WBAC price and save 50%, or 2 for 1.

Sheepshanks

38,505 posts

139 months

Tuesday 9th December
quotequote all
South tdf said:
Here s a plan, buy your car at WBAC price and save 50%, or 2 for 1.
Well, no - you'd only save 33%. Or buy 1.5 cars.

ChocolateFrog

33,952 posts

193 months

Tuesday 9th December
quotequote all
aceofspades1 said:
Why are VW prices so inflated?

I have owned several Golfs including the MK7.5 and they are nice enough but I cannot understand why the prices are so inflated.

£7k gets you an average mileage 10-year-old base spec Golf petrol, if you want a low mileage automatic you're looking at over £10k. If you want a higher spec car, make that another several thousand.

To add to that VW stealerships now want £1300+ for a cambelt and water pump change!

Scene tax.

Somehow the brand still carries some kudos.

stevemcs

9,776 posts

113 months

Tuesday 9th December
quotequote all
itcaptainslow said:
Easier said than done - by the look of it the 1.5 needs a plethora of special tools to change the cambelt, and I bet it's not the only engine in the range like that.
Only on some of the 1.5's and 1.4's, the cambelt is the easy bit, its the bit that goes on the end of the cams and adjusts them to 0.00, we haven't been brave enough to try them, otherwise its a £500 job - although there is no current interval on them, so i wouldn't bother with changing the belt - only on the diesel would i advise changing it.

I'd still buy a Focus, i30/Ceed over any VW product.

itcaptainslow

4,352 posts

156 months

Tuesday 9th December
quotequote all
stevemcs said:
itcaptainslow said:
Easier said than done - by the look of it the 1.5 needs a plethora of special tools to change the cambelt, and I bet it's not the only engine in the range like that.
Only on some of the 1.5's and 1.4's, the cambelt is the easy bit, its the bit that goes on the end of the cams and adjusts them to 0.00, we haven't been brave enough to try them, otherwise its a £500 job - although there is no current interval on them, so i wouldn't bother with changing the belt - only on the diesel would i advise changing it.

I'd still buy a Focus, i30/Ceed over any VW product.
I remember reading about the process in an issue of Car Mechanics, it looks an absolute minefield!

Sheepshanks

38,505 posts

139 months

Tuesday 9th December
quotequote all
stevemcs said:
I'd still buy a Focus, i30/Ceed over any VW product.
I'd always been a Ford man from Escorts, Cortina and Capris, even had a couple of early Fiestas but just never took to Focus. Getting daughter a car we looked at i30/Ceed for the warranty, then went to look at mk6 Golf and the Golf just felt a cut above.