Depends on the job...
Parking attendant/driver-$10/hr
Mechanic- $18-$35/hr
car salesmen - get commision
servicewriters- $50-80k
5$ per hour !
Depending upon which car dealership you work for if its a larger dealership your more likely to make more then a smaller dealership. Roughly 50K to 70K
it depends on the car dealership and what is wrong with the vehicle
There are lots of dealership in selling and buying the car as new. The dealer is usually paid on a given commission depending with the agreement reached.
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.
It is tied to how much work they get done, and how satisfied the customers are. In an average dealership, a good service manager should make at least $10,000 a month. At a good dealership, they should also be furnished with a demo car to drive.
Saturn Auto Glass is a car dealership. Most car dealerships does not do cheap work. They get paid by the hour and their prices can be costly. You would have to go to a Junk Yard and they do Auto Glass work for cheap.
You can be denied work for any reason.
They don't really need to. If a bank wants to reposses your car, they will hire a repo man to do it. Licensed repo's have master keys from the car manufacturers that can get them into most cars. Do you owe to a bank or to the dealership? The dealership has a key to your car. The bank can work with the dealership in a similar way. If you owe the bank and there either is no dealership involved or the dealership cannot provide a key, they still have options- they can tow the car, obtain a key from the manufacturer, have one made, etc. They normally already have this process taken care of before the loan is granted. Until the car is paid off, it belongs to the bank or dealership. If they are not being paid on a regular basis, they will take whatever measures legally possible to reposes their property. On a similar note, when they come out to repose the car, they have already called the local authorities. This allows them to take the car whenever and from where ever.
That depends on their ability to sell cars - not just in Texas, but anywhere else. Car salespersons are typically paid on commission - what the exact percentage is will be determined by the dealership.
They collect on DMV's behalf and handle all that for you.
Some will and some wont. Remember that car dealers are in the business to make money so don't expect to get anywhere near what your car is actually worth.