Yes - unless it has already been sent to the bank and you have been given a loan - dependant also upon which part of the contract you are referring to - most times you can ad a warranty if warranty was an option. If it is something major consult an attorney
A dealership does not have a legal right to re-sign a contract once it has been signed. However, if there is an obvious typographical mistake in the contract, they may request to re-sign it.
The car dealership did not sign my contract, is it still binding?
The car dealership keeps the contract. However, since the car dealer gets paid by its financier to have fully paid for the car, then the financier keeps the contract and later gives it the car owner upon final payments have been completed by the owner buyer.
A 16-year old cannot get financing from a car dealership because they are not old enough to enter into a legally-binding contract. The age of 18-years is the youngest that a person can sign any kind of legal contract.
The moment you sign the contract, have financing, and they hand you the keys. The car is now yours.
No
Right up until you sign the contract, you can walk away. After that ... you have NO time to change your mind. A signed contract is a signed contract. The one exception would be if the contract itself explicitly gives you the right of rescission for some period, so check it carefully. Most contracts very explicitly say there is no "cooling-off" period, so be sure you want the car when you sign. They say this so the dealership can point to it if you later change your mind and say "Nope. See, right here, we TOLD you."
It depends on where you are. Here in Tennessee, there is no "cooling off" period. Once you sign the paperwork, the car is yours. The only way to change it is if the dealership and/or finance company agrees.
You will have to read the contents of your contract. Also, if the contract if a 12-month contract, read carefully before you sign every year as things might change from year to year.
The question is a bit confusing. When purchasing a car from a dealership, the transaction is by contract. Once the contract is signed, the contracted price is the price. There is no changing of minds later. If, as is not unusual, the dealer sent you with the vehicle to return at a later date to sign the contract, and then changed the price, this could be an attempt at fraud. Get the change in writing, do not sign anything, and take your evidence directly to an attorney who specializes in consumer fraud.
Most states have a three-day grace period after signing a contract for a car purchase, mortgage, etc. That means you can change your mind within three days and get out of the contract. After that, or if you don't live in such a state, you're stuck. Most state do not on vehicle purchases. As far as I know California is the only state that has that law and it just went into effect in 2005. In Texas, the law says once you sign the contract and take posession of hthe car, you are done unless it is a lemon. If you do not sign off on the car and leave it at the dealership, you foil the completion of the contract cycle in taking financing and registration. That is straight from the DOTx rules. The car that my dad sign for the money was going to be out of pocket. There was no finance, because my dad would not qualify for loans. The car dealership was aware of my dads situation. The car was never purchased yet, no money has been exchanged. In the stat of California is he still liable?
you have 3 days to change your mind or reconsider their offer of a contract or cancel a contract after that you are legally bound to the contract..take it in writing to the dealer and keep a copy i believe according to the law that governs contracts you have 3 days to change your mind..but the dealership isn't going to tell you that and they will tell you you cant get out of it but you can if unsure call the free legal assistance hot line you can get that number thru your local welfare agency...good luck