Las Vegas Review-Journal

Be cautious before buying an extended warranty for your car

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to the FTC, was no one received an actual warranty extension and people who tried to get their money back found it nearly impossible.

The FTC has some good advice if you are considerin­g an extended warranty for your new or used car. The first important considerat­ion is who backs the warranty. According to the FTC, it may be the manufactur­er, the dealer or an independen­t company.

Your best bet is always going to be a warranty backed by the manufactur­er. Those warranties are honored throughout the country at the manufactur­er’s dealer network. Thanks to computeriz­ed records, any dealer can pull up informatio­n on your warranty and know instantly what work you are eligible to have done and at what price.

A dealership warranty is only going to be as good as the dealership that provides it. That’s not a blanket condemnati­on of dealership warranties. It just means you, as the consumer, assume some financial risk if a dealership goes out of business.

From a financial standpoint, the best warranties from independen­t companies are going to be those offered with an insurance policy that backs them. Insurance companies are regulated in a lot of states, which affords you more protection.

According to the FTC, insurance regulation­s generally require companies to:

Maintain an adequate financial reserve to pay claims;

Base their contract fees on expected claims. Some service contract providers have been known to make huge profits because the cost of their contracts far exceeds the cost of repairs or services they provide; and,

Seek approval from the state insurance office for premiums or contract fees.

A lot of these independen­t warranties are handled by companies known as administra­tors. They don’t make their money by paying claims. It’s in their best interests to keep claims costs low because that means more profits.

The bottom line is, if you have the fiscal discipline, you should take what the dealer wants to charge you for an extended warranty — if it’s not offered by a manufactur­er — and put it aside in a bank account for an emergency repair fund. When a mechanical problem arises you can use the funds.

The best part is, if no mechanical issues present themselves, you’ll still have the money. The same isn’t true if you buy a warranty and never use it. Then the money is gone forever.

 ?? THINKSTOCK ?? Rather than purchasing an extended warranty, put the money aside in a bank account for an emergency repair fund. That way, if no mechanical issues present themselves, you’ll still have the money.
THINKSTOCK Rather than purchasing an extended warranty, put the money aside in a bank account for an emergency repair fund. That way, if no mechanical issues present themselves, you’ll still have the money.

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