If the car has never been titled then it can be sold as new. A new car demonstrator or demo will often have as many as 5,000 miles on it and still sold as new.
At our dealership it could be sold as a demonstrator. The car in our jurisdiction would have to be not registered to an owner, the mileage explained and then the car could still be sold as new with the warranty starting at 1900 miles.
It has nothing to do with the miles. It has to do with the title. If the car has never been titled it can be sold as new. Typically in the situation of a demo a dealer will put less than 5,000 miles on the car. The warranty is not affected because it starts when you purchase the car not from zero miles but from the miles at that time.
contact the dealership where the vehicle was purchased they will have record of the sale and warranty
100 miles.
In the state of California miles on a car do not factor in if it is used or not. California considers a vehicle new until it is reported as sold by the DMV.
no as soon as it leaves the lot its not new you can sell it as practically new or like newAnswerYes it can be sold as new as long as the car has never been titled. I have looked in magazines where they sell used cars that have like 1000-1200 miles on it and they say that it is new or like new.
Possibly, if it hasn't been titled before.
Yes, as long as it has not be titled to anyone, it is still new with 632 miles on it. It is a demonstrator, and as such the price should reflect that.
It typically starts the day the car is put into service meaning the day is sold to its first owner. The miles on warranty would start at that time as well. If you have a 3 yr/36,000 mile warranty and the day you buy the car it has 458 miles on it then your warranty would expire at 36,458 miles or 3 years from purchase date. Which ever comes first. I have to respectfully disagree with the above answer. The warranty is for 36,000 miles and it runs out at 36,000 miles even if the car had 458 miles on it when sold new for the first time. With that many miles the car would be heavily discounted as a demonstrator. But let's say it had 2 miles on it. The warranty still runs out at 36,000 miles and not 36,002. It is not a warranty to the buyer it is a new car warranty and it starts the instant the car rolls out of the factory.
Whether a car is considered new or used is more a legal distinction than a mileage distinction. A new car is considered used as soon as it is sold by the dealer even if it only has 3 or 4 miles on it. As such, the price of a very low-mileage used vehicle is substantial less than a new vehicle which is why I would never buy a new vehicle.
As long as it has never been used on the road by any any previous registered keepers it can be sold as new. It can be sold as a new car as long as the ownership has not been transfered from the selling dealer to an individual, and an original title was not created. Once a car gets an excess amount of mileage, it is called a demonstrator. A demonstrator should be discounted due to the mileage. One point here is if the dealer searches for a car for you and it is say.. 500 miles away, it will have 500 miles+ when it gets there for you to take. Not only this, but the dealer will charge you for the transportation service to drive it to you at his dealership! (sould like a good deal huh?)