Help help help!!!
Help help help!!!
ok this is the story i saw a commercial for a company called US FIDELIS its a auto warranty company, well lets say that i called them to get a quote to see how much it would cost and for how long. it started for my 2004 TL at $3280 for a 4 year coverage or 40,000 miles, which covers just about everything on the car minus maintenance ofcourse but anyway by the end of the quote it was down to $2100 for the warranty, now my question is has anybody used them or has coverange with them or any of there other companies called ONE AUTO WARRANTY please any info is HIGHLY aapreciated thanks to all...... all inputs, all facts, all is welcome from good to bad to everything
Both of those are SCAMS! G-Search them.. plus.. those warranty prices are outrageous.
Don't get anything other than American Honda Extended Warranty. I was at a time interested in getting Fidelity (not to be confused with US FIDELIS). An acquaintance of mine has fidelity and they paid for his tranny and a/c system after a little bit of a runaround but they paid upfront to Honda.
Ask who your local Acura dealership uses. Also ask your car insurance company or your bank and do a little research. IMO I'd save your money. Warranty / Extended Service Contracts are a huge hassle especially for all the money people spend on them. These companies are usually a bunch of crooks who have no problem taking your money and screw over the consumers.
Don't get anything other than American Honda Extended Warranty. I was at a time interested in getting Fidelity (not to be confused with US FIDELIS). An acquaintance of mine has fidelity and they paid for his tranny and a/c system after a little bit of a runaround but they paid upfront to Honda.
Ask who your local Acura dealership uses. Also ask your car insurance company or your bank and do a little research. IMO I'd save your money. Warranty / Extended Service Contracts are a huge hassle especially for all the money people spend on them. These companies are usually a bunch of crooks who have no problem taking your money and screw over the consumers.
I have seen the TV commercials for US Fidelis, but don't know how reputable they are. A better idea recommended by some economists/ financial experts is to save a little each month (say $100-200) in a cash account (like ING or Emigrant Bank, where it's FDIC insured) as an emergency fund for high cost repairs after factory warranty expiration like a transmission repair. If you don't spend the cash (which is likely with the TL's reliability), you are building up a cash cushion for the next car you buy (for the down payment). If you give $2100 to US Fidelis, and never have a problem with your car, and go past the mileage indicated on the warranty (even if US Fidelis or any warranty company is reputable), you're out the $2100 (it's not recoverable). Lastly, for warranty coverage, you have to give up $2100 in one lump sum. Personally, I would go for the cash saving option.
Opinions??
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