You have all heard the term ‘model runout sale’ and some of you may have heard the term ‘End of year plate sale’ but what does it all really mean? And what is an MY17?
Rental car companies have a formula and the basis for this formulae is how much it will cost them while they have the vehicle versus the return from renting the vehicle. The basis of their calculation can be used by you to really consider which vehicle you can afford and the results will probably amaze you.
Well to start the explanation, MY stands for ‘Model Year’ and technically speaking it once meant when the current model was first introduced. If it was used that way today we would have some MY12 vehicles being sold in 2018 brand new off the production line. That means that is how long some vehicles have not actually had a new model or innovation introduced.
To get around that, manufacturers introduce a new model each year even if it is no different to the old model. To make it even more confusing, once upon a time MY18 would be introduced at the beginning of 2018. That makes sense right? But then some manufacturers started trying to get the hop on other manufacturers and now you see MY19 cars being introduced in about July of 2018.
So where does all that leave you the consumer? It leaves you confused and up the creek, that’s where!
So let’s go back to the beginning and try to unravel this to make some sense. There are four dates on a vehicle that all mean different things and three of them matter.
So from all that, what is an ‘end of year sale’, or ‘plate sale’, or end of ‘MY sale’?
Well unless it really is the end of a model as described above in design, engine or features, then it is a clever marketing ploy. But who cares as long as they give you a good discount.
Should you buy an MY17 in 2018? Absolutely, if there is no difference in the vehicle except a plate that says 2017, and there is likely not to be any other difference.
And so the answers to the perplexing questions are: