I can’t find any books that list used car prices. There used to be guides like Edmunds and the Kelley’s Blue Book for sale all over - a catalog of various vintage used cards with typical selling prices. I’ve looked in 2 bookstores and both have told me they can’t get them anymore, and on Amazon I only see used ones (not sure what they’re sold for). I have a buying guide from Consumer Reports, but it gives broad ranges of prices and is mostly about things other than price.
What happened to these all-important guides?
I have found some web sites that do this, but haven’t figured out how to use them while I’m walking around a car lot with some smiling young stud in a polyester suit chasing me…
According to Kelley, they certainly are still selling the book in bookstores. Your local stores just may not be carrying it for some reason. At a glance, Edmunds doesn’t appear to sell a dead tree version, at least not on their website.
Other than those and Consumer Reports, I’m not aware of any other price guides. That’s not saying much, though.
You might try calling your local library. Public libraries, in my experience, tend to keep current issues of Kelly Blue Book or NADA price guides in their reference or ready reference collections.
The Kelly Blue Book has almost a 0 veracity rating. Remember that if one of those Polyester wonders starts quoting it to you. It’s NADA as** Rick** sez.
The libraries absolutely have all those things. I must admit I haven’t seen them by the checkout at the bookstore like I used to, though. But here at the library we’ve got the car ones and the RV ones and the boat ones and and and and.
>But here at the library we’ve got the car ones and the RV ones and the boat ones and and and and
I assumed they’d be in the “Reference” section and so couldn’t be borrowed, so, like web sites, they wouldn’t be useable walking around on a car lot. Is that correct?
Fear Itself, you’re right, this is what I was looking for. I don’t know why I tried to find it and did not see this!
Rick, I like NADA. How do we know they are more accurate than Kelly? I don’t know how accurate either of them are.
We do have some in Ready Reference, which we keep behind the desk so you can’t steal it, but we have a few copies you can check out as well. YLMV (your library may vary.)
Well it is published by the National Automotive Dealers Association for use by their members. So they have no interest in blowing smoke up their members asses.
As I said before NADA tracks transaction prices, which should give a much closer idea of what a car is actually is worth.
The NADA guides are pretty much a standard reference, not only for the auto industry, but lenders, insurance cos. and even police depts. The guides contain much more than just values, such as the various places to find each make and model’s VIN and how to read it.