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It Could Be Time To Buy A Saturn

Posted: Nov, 08 2009

  |  By: Jessica L. Anderson | Kiplinger's Personal Finance

If you're in the market for a new car, GM's loss could be your gain. Saturn's dealers have until the end of October 2010 to close, now that a deal has fallen through to sell the car line to the Penske Automotive Group. But many showrooms could close by January because inventory is low.

That means the sooner you shop, the better your choices. And there are good reasons to consider a Saturn. Its most popular models -- the Aura midsize sedan, the Vue small crossover and the Outlook midsize crossover -- all score well in Kiplinger's Personal Finance's rankings. The Aura XE was Kiplinger's Best New Car for the 2007 model year.

According to TrueCar, an automotive-data company that tracks prices, the average transaction prices for Saturn's most popular models are within a few hundred dollars of invoice. The average discount from sticker price is close to $1,000 on these models. And more incentives are likely soon.

GM will honor the warranty on any Saturn after the brand has passed. Vehicles will be serviced by Saturn dealerships until they close and afterward by other GM dealerships.

Parts won't be an issue, says Kelley Blue Book's Jack Nerad, because Saturn products share platforms and components with other GM products. Aftermarket parts companies are also likely to step in to fill any gaps.

It's a somber ending for Saturn, which branded itself as a new kind of American car company and boasted quality-engineered cars and a happy cadre of loyal customers. But not long after Saturn's launch in 1990, General Motors shook that legendary customer loyalty by cutting costs and undermining innovative marketing strategies, eventually building cars of dubious quality.

Several years ago, GM invested heavily to revive Saturn with all-new, much-improved vehicles, but buyers stayed away. So in June, GM put Saturn on the chopping block as part of its bankruptcy-reorganization strategy.

If you're likely to trade in your car two to three years from now, buying a Saturn isn't the deal for you. Resale values are low, and they're likely to go a bit lower as the brand disappears. Nerad says that's typical of a brand in less demand.

For example, when GM announced it was shutting down the Oldsmobile brand, people still bought them, but the cars quickly depreciated. A year after Olds went out of business, two-year-old models had the value of other brands' comparable five-year-old cars, according to Kelley Blue Book.

But if you're the "buy it and keep it until the wheels fall off" type, resale values don't matter.

And who knows? One day your Saturn may regain its value as a collectible.

Read More:

- Best New Car Deals
- Best Lease Deals
- Search and Read Stories at AOL Autos

 
Discuss
1 - 5 of 107 Comments
ggpelonis Nov 10, 2009 3:29 AM
Not the best cars, true, but my experience with my 2000 SL1 is that it has run reliably for nearly 10 years (it broke down only once).
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krhbilly Nov 09, 2009 7:48 PM
Just don't buy it from a Saturn dealership in Jacksonville, Florida. They are awful to deal with!!!!!!
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moonlover2 Nov 09, 2009 6:08 PM
I bought the first model year & kept the car till it was traded in, looking a little worse for wear but still running fine, on the '03 Ion. We also had the wagon I traded in after my husband died for an '01 SL2 for my college bound daughter. So on #3 & #4 Saturns. I'd buy another one now if I could afford a car payment just so I could drive it trouble free like all the others for the next 10 years. The dealership has always done right by me. While in for routine maintenance they even fixed things that weren't under warrenty but I said I would have to wait to get those taken care of - like a gas tank that had to have gotten dents on the gravel & dirt roads driving south from the Badlands into Nebraska to a reservation with mostly unpaved roads. They replaced it in Missouri without batting an eye & I know it was our own fault. They fixed a seat belt motor that I didn't want to fix right then rather than let me go without the safety feature even another couple weeks. I'll miss them for the way they treated women also, with respect. Didn't talk down to me when I was choosing the car I would drive, didn't talk only to my husband but was interested in what mattered to me in my car.
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kcbrowncoat Nov 09, 2009 5:25 PM
I had two Saturn SL2's and rarely had any problems with either of them. Matter of fact they were probably the best cars I've owned. I now own an Astra. Am I worried about parts or service? No. It's basically a Chevy. Matter of fact I took my Astra to a local Chevy dealership a month ago for a minor issue with the timing belt. They had the part, took care of the problem and honored my warranty.
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ghgeary Nov 09, 2009 5:16 PM
GM is marketing Cruze in China and Europe but not here. We already have an economical, fuel-efficient and rust-resistant car line in the U.S. The Saturn line! I live up north and love my plastic body SL2. And Saturn has always appealed to women -- their dealers are not flim-flam men and do not treat us like dummies! One person suggested that Ford buy Saturn. I think that is a great idea.
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