Hyundai Incentives and Rebates for December 2009 is available, below is the summary for Hyundai Deals for December 2009.
Hyundai USA offers Cash rebate, special lease program and Special APR for well-qualified Hyundai buyers in December 2009. Keep in mind that for car rebate cash, they are on top of all dealer discounts.
For 2010 Models, the 2010 Hyundai Accent has $500 Hyundai Customer Cash for purchase on top of all discounts.
For the 2010 Hyundai Accent 3-door model, Hyundai also gives out $500 cash back to Hyundai buyers. Besides, if car buyers prefer to finance the car directly from Hyundai, there is special APR program that could save some money due to the lower interest rate.
2010 Hyundai Azera has no customer rebate at this moment yet, but has special APR available for well-qualified Hyundai buyers.
The 2010 Hyundai Sonata is the 2010 Hyundai car with the most incentive. There is a $1,000 Hyundai to customer cash rebate. For current Hyundai owners, there is additional $500 Hyundai Valued coupon that can be combined with the $1,000 Hyundai customer cash that adds more value to the car deal. If you want to finance the car through Hyundai, there is 0% special APR up to 60 months, too.
For Hyundai 2009 Models, the most rebate offered is the 2009 Hyundai Sonata with $3,000 Customer rebate, while the 2009 Hyundai Santa Fe has $2,500 Hyundai cash back to your pocket.
Are you a student? Hyundai USA offers newly graduates and students who are going to leave school with some bonus incentive to purchase a new Hyundai vehicle from $500 to $1,000, depends on model and model year.
Are you an active Military member? Hyundai USA offers $1,000 on active military member on most new Hyundai car purchase.
Tags: Car Pricing News, Hyundai Deals, Hyundai Incentives, Hyundai Promotions, Hyundai Rebates
Hyundai Motor America released a program that Hyundai owners are guaranteed to pay up to $1.49 per gallon on regular gas with the purchase of certain 2009 Hyundai Vehicles. It sounds very attractive as summer is coming, so we all expect gas price goes higher and higher. Here is the official guide line. As most people do not read the whole fine prints of the rule, below are things what we think you need, and also might want to know.
1. Hyundai owners need to enroll the program via the official website, or by calling 1-877-GAS-4149 ( 1-877-427-4149)
2. Only at participating gas stations.
3. A valid credit card or debit, including MasterCard, Visa, American Express and Discover Card to identify your identity. In other words, the actual Hyundai owner is the person who purchases the gas.
4. The program is for up to 12 months, which means un-used fuel will NOT be paid as incentive of cash rebate if the Hyundai owner does not use all.
5. $1.49 per gallon is only applied to regular unleaded fuel. Difference of $0.15 per gallon per grade would be added into the amount. For example, if you purchase Mid-grade (88 – 89), you would pay $0.15 more per gallon, and for premium grade (90 – 93), you would need to pay $0.3 more per gallon.
6. Federal taxes on gasoline paid to government are not protected, which means in the garmented price ($1.49 per gallon) could be changed if federal taxes are changed.
7. If the ownership of the Hyundai car is transferred, since this program is NOT transferable, it still available to original owner until the program expires.
8. In case your Hyundai gas card is stolen or for any reason to be de-activated, you need to pay $25 to re-activate and the period when the car is de-activated, it still count against the 1-year period.
The Hyundai Assurance Gas Lock program sounds good for sure, but is it really that good? We are not that sure about that because according to Hyundai, Hyundai buyers could choose either $1,000 additional Hyundai Customer Cash Rebate or this Hyundai $1.49 gas program. Below are the Hyundai vehicles eligible and some analysis from us.
|
Eligible Hyundai Vehicles |
Eligible Gallon for Gas Plan |
Gas Plan Price |
|
Break-even Gas price |
|
2009 Hyundai Sonata 4cyl |
480 |
$1.499 |
$2.08 ($1000/480) |
$3.58 |
|
2009 Hyundai Sonata V6 |
545 |
$1.499 |
$1.83 ($1000/545) |
$3.33 |
|
2009 Hyundai Elantra |
430 |
$1.499 |
$2.32 ($1000/430) |
$3.82 |
|
2009 Hyundai Accent |
415 |
$1.499 |
$2.41 ($1000/415) |
$3.91 |
|
2009 Hyundai Santa Fe FWD |
600 |
$1.499 |
$1.67 ($1000/600) |
$3.17 |
|
2009 Hyundai Sanfa Fe AWD |
635 |
$1.499 |
$1.57 ($1000/635) |
$3.07 |
|
2009 Hyundai Elantra Touring |
465 |
$1.499 |
$2.15 ($1000/465) |
$3.65 |
|
2009 Hyundai Tucson 4cyl |
545 |
$1.499 |
$1.83 ($1000/545) |
$3.33 |
|
2009 Hyundai Tucson V6 |
600 |
$1.499 |
$1.67 ($1000/600) |
$3.17 |
|
2009 Hyundai Veracruz |
670 |
$1.499 |
$1.49 ($1000/670) |
$2.99 |
|
2009 Hyundai Azera 3.3L |
570 |
$1.499 |
$1.75 ($1000/570) |
$3.25 |
|
2009 Hyundai Azera 3.8L |
600 |
$1.499 |
$1.67 ($1000/600) |
$3.17 |
The THIRD COLUMN shows the additional gas price could be covered by the $1,000 Hyundai Customer cash in leu of the Hyundai Gas Lock Plan. The break-even gas price in the last column shows the average gas price for the next 12 months that would be equivalent to the $1,000 customer cash. Keep in mind that it is the average price of the gas price, not the peak price. According to the Weekly U.S. Regular Conventional Retail Gasoline Prices provided by Energy Information Administration, the national average gas price for the last 12 months is around $2.55 per gallon.
The amount in the last column shows the amount you would have saved by enrolling the Hyundai Gas Price Lock program instead of the $1,000 Hyundai Rebate cash. There is no option would save you as much as $1,000.
Besides, how if some Hyundai Assurance Gas Lock participants lose their cards, and need to pay $25 to retrieve it as #8 mentions?
Is the Hyundai Assurance Gas Lock program a good choice for you? We provided all objective numbers, and now It’s your call.
Tags: car incentives, Car Pricing News, Car Rebates, Hyundai Assurance Gas Lock, Hyundai Gas Rebate, Hyundai Incentives