Fightnfire
Moderator
Tim,
In a handful of your videos, and other review sites videos, I've heard that according to the manufacturers customer don't cross shop midsize and full size trucks. From the first time I heard that it got me thinking about the topic. I myself have cross shopped in 2011 when moving back into a pickup. I had a limited budget and at that point in time was looking for a low miles used truck that could haul a small family and a small 3,500lb travel trailer. I ended up with a 2009 Tacoma mainly because it was many thousands of dollars less than a lightly used low miles half ton.
As I'm looking around the site, and others, I notice that a lot of people are cross shopping but go full size because they can't justify >$45,000 for a mid size truck with the options they want. As I listen to my friends, and see stories of this online I can't help but feel either times are changing and people are cross shopping now or they always have and the manufacturers are feeding us a line.
I just priced out a 2024 Chevy Silverado Custom Trail Boss 2.7 CrewCab 4WD, added the trailer brake controller ($275) and Safety confidence package ($390). Tow rating is max of 9,600 lbs. Total with options incl. destination is $46,660.
A 2024 Chevy Colorado Trail Boss 2.7 4WD with the same options, Towing and Safety (which required the addition of a convienence package) comes out to $40,145.
For Toyota the 2024 Tundra SR5 CrewCab 5.5' box 4WD is $52,400 incl. dest.
The 2024 Tacoma CrewCab SR5 5' 4WD with cheapest towing package is $44,970.
The Tundra base price seems to be higher, I can only assume not having a cheaper drivetrain option hurts their base price in comparison to Chevy/Ford/Ram. I'm very surprised that you can get in a Trail Boss Silverado for only $2k more than a similarly equipped SR5 Tacoma. If you drop the Trail Boss package, the Silverado would actually be cheaper. It seems like the price gap has disappeared.
Is it safe to say that because midsize trucks have gotten so expensive, looking right at the '24 Tacoma specifically, there's a chance more and more cross shopping is happening and midsize sales could suffer?
I just don't buy the line that consumers don't cross shop the two. I think there is a very specific small segment of midsize owners who won't but more and more seem to be.
In a handful of your videos, and other review sites videos, I've heard that according to the manufacturers customer don't cross shop midsize and full size trucks. From the first time I heard that it got me thinking about the topic. I myself have cross shopped in 2011 when moving back into a pickup. I had a limited budget and at that point in time was looking for a low miles used truck that could haul a small family and a small 3,500lb travel trailer. I ended up with a 2009 Tacoma mainly because it was many thousands of dollars less than a lightly used low miles half ton.
As I'm looking around the site, and others, I notice that a lot of people are cross shopping but go full size because they can't justify >$45,000 for a mid size truck with the options they want. As I listen to my friends, and see stories of this online I can't help but feel either times are changing and people are cross shopping now or they always have and the manufacturers are feeding us a line.
I just priced out a 2024 Chevy Silverado Custom Trail Boss 2.7 CrewCab 4WD, added the trailer brake controller ($275) and Safety confidence package ($390). Tow rating is max of 9,600 lbs. Total with options incl. destination is $46,660.
A 2024 Chevy Colorado Trail Boss 2.7 4WD with the same options, Towing and Safety (which required the addition of a convienence package) comes out to $40,145.
For Toyota the 2024 Tundra SR5 CrewCab 5.5' box 4WD is $52,400 incl. dest.
The 2024 Tacoma CrewCab SR5 5' 4WD with cheapest towing package is $44,970.
The Tundra base price seems to be higher, I can only assume not having a cheaper drivetrain option hurts their base price in comparison to Chevy/Ford/Ram. I'm very surprised that you can get in a Trail Boss Silverado for only $2k more than a similarly equipped SR5 Tacoma. If you drop the Trail Boss package, the Silverado would actually be cheaper. It seems like the price gap has disappeared.
Is it safe to say that because midsize trucks have gotten so expensive, looking right at the '24 Tacoma specifically, there's a chance more and more cross shopping is happening and midsize sales could suffer?
I just don't buy the line that consumers don't cross shop the two. I think there is a very specific small segment of midsize owners who won't but more and more seem to be.