This web site features new car buying tips provided by consumer advocate & auto expert Mark Eskeldson, author of What Car Dealers Don't Want You to Know. Mark also wrote What Auto Mechanics Don't Want You to Know, the first hard-hitting exposé of the biggest names in the repair business. His books have been featured in Smart Money, Kiplinger's, Reader's Digest, The Wall Street Journal, and on ABC, NBC and CBS TV.

New Car Buying Tips--

NEW! Be sure to read How I Bought A Popular New SUV for $3,611 Below Dealer Invoice.

Money Saving Tips & Resources: New car buying tips plus resources for buying or leasing cars & trucks. Information and free price quotes on new & used cars, loans, leases, insurance, extended warranties, vehicle history reports and much more.

Looking for a new car or truck? Click Here for Free Quotes.

How To Buy A New Car Below Invoice: Learn how to buy new cars at huge discounts, often below the dealer invoice price. Smart shopper secrets revealed!

Car Buying Secrets: Learn the most common tricks that new car dealers use to overcharge people. Great car buying tips to protect new car shoppers!

Car Leasing Secrets: Learn the most common tricks that have been used to overcharge people on leases.

Car Buying FAQ: See this section for answers to the most common questions asked by car buyers.

Leasing Secrets, Part 2: How to Get Great Lease Deals. Learn all about lease residuals, how to calculate lease payments, and how to get great lease deals.

NewCarBuyingTips blog: See videos of undercover investigations, car dealer tricks and scams, how to buy new cars, and more new car buying tips.

Auto Repair Secrets: Find out which well-known companies have been accused of selling unnecessary repairs after undercover investigations were done. Learn how quotas, sales commissions and contests have been used to encourage mechanics to sell more repairs -- and which big-name companies were sued over those practices.

CarInfo News Page: Contains stories of auto-related consumer rip-offs that may have received little or no coverage by the mainstream news media. (The offending companies are usually among the biggest advertisers for TV, radio, and/or newspapers.)