Guitar center new payment options

pushedcrayon1

New member
Hey guys, just figured I'd pass on some information I heard today while talking to my local gc rep.

The store now offers interest free payment plans, 18 months on most brands in the store, and 3 years on Gibson products. If you're approved, no interest as long as you make the monthly payments, and there's no hidden fees or anything. Seems pretty cool!

What do you think?

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Re: Guitar center new payment options

All good plus 45 day return policy now up from 30.

The salesmen are not allowed to make deals like they used to but there are some coupons they have access to and can help good customers with larger purchases from time to time
 
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I had a fun day of GC payment options. At the LA Amp Show, I ended up getting 8 $10 gift cards. Unfortunately, none could be combined. So I had them ring me up 8 times for $10 purchases, which is what they hoped we wouldn't do.

There was also a bin of Martin acoustic strings for $3 each, since the packaging had an outdated special offer, plus electric strings were 3 for $10. I ended up getting a year supply of electric and acoustic strings, a 12AX7, and a nice strap, all for free! :laughing:
 
Re: Guitar center new payment options

You smart shopper you!

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Re: Guitar center new payment options

And I'm going to blow off some really good locally owned stores to shop at GC for these discounts?
 
Re: Guitar center new payment options

You can shop wherever you please, I was just passing along information I had heard in case it benefits anyone.

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Re: Guitar center new payment options

And I'm going to blow off some really good locally owned stores to shop at GC for these discounts?


I shop at locals and GC. I still consider Sam Ash a local NY company fwiw, shopped there since I was a kid.

I always try to give locals biz it is really important for a lot of reasons. It is getting harder and harder for them to compete in certain areas though.
 
Re: Guitar center new payment options

Those payment plans are a great help to those that can't afford a large outlay all at once. But you must be very responsible and make sure you're not even late with a single payment. If you screw up, you'll be charged that interest that you were originally trying to avoid. It will be a very high rate (sometimes as much as 22%) and it will be accrued retroactively from day 1. You will end up paying as much in interest as the cost of the product you are buying.

So, if you are not very responsible or you're forgetful, it's better to just put some money aside each month until you have enough to buy it outright.

Believe me, the banks and finance companies are no dummies. This is their business. They've done the research and know that in the end enough people will miss a payment and have to pay that exorbitant interest rate and they will make their money...they don't ever "give away" money or the opportunity to make lots of it.
 
Re: Guitar center new payment options

GC. is just doing what Sweetwater, zzounds, ams, and same day music have been doing for years. Interest free payment plans. I have bought several guitars that way. They charge your cc monthly on x date..so there is no way to miss a payment unless you are lacking the funds, cancel the card, etc.
 
Re: Guitar center new payment options

GC. is just doing what Sweetwater, zzounds, ams, and same day music have been doing for years. Interest free payment plans. I have bought several guitars that way. They charge your cc monthly on x date..so there is no way to miss a payment unless you are lacking the funds, cancel the card, etc.

Not quite, this is through their own card, not yours.
 
Re: Guitar center new payment options

Not quite, this is through their own card, not yours.


Ahh. That's a bit more squirrely then. No thanks, GC.

I have had great luck with ZZounds/AMS and Sweetwater, and you use your own card (I use my visa check card, so it comes out of my bank account). The only time I ever had a problem was where a card expired and I needed to go online to give them the new card#/date. I wasn't charged anything extra (though I provided the new crd within a day or three of payment due date)
 
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the thing that sucks about GC is that they'd check my credit and see that it is s#it :)
The bad thing about zzounds et al. is that they don't have half the selection that GC does. But Zzounds doesn't care about my credit unless it's about >$1000 purchase, cuz I've never missed a payment with them.

Sweetwater wouldn't let me do 3 payments on anything. They do a lot of big $$$ accounts I think and so they don't care about doodz like me who've made a few mistakes early on and are still paying for it with my credit score.
 
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Just be aware that if you're late on one payment, you're on the hook for 29.99% of the original purchase price.
 
Re: Guitar center new payment options

Cool! So in the 20 years it takes me to pay off a new Gibson, at least I wont have interest.. haha

Thanks for sharing the info! I have a GC card and usually get mailed changes like this. dont recall seeing anything..
 
Re: Guitar center new payment options

Cool! So in the 20 years it takes me to pay off a new Gibson, at least I wont have interest.. haha

Thanks for sharing the info! I have a GC card and usually get mailed changes like this. dont recall seeing anything..

You should be getting a new card, I just got mine the other day.
 
Guitar center new payment options

Those payment plans are a great help to those that can't afford a large outlay all at once. But you must be very responsible and make sure you're not even late with a single payment. If you screw up, you'll be charged that interest that you were originally trying to avoid. It will be a very high rate (sometimes as much as 22%) and it will be accrued retroactively from day 1. You will end up paying as much in interest as the cost of the product you are buying.

So, if you are not very responsible or you're forgetful, it's better to just put some money aside each month until you have enough to buy it outright.

Believe me, the banks and finance companies are no dummies. This is their business. They've done the research and know that in the end enough people will miss a payment and have to pay that exorbitant interest rate and they will make their money...they don't ever "give away" money or the opportunity to make lots of it.

Exactly. They wouldn't do it if it wasn't beneficial to them. The cold hard truth is that from a retailer's point of view, "selling loans" is really nothing but selling things for more than they are worth. They wouldn't give you an offer unless they knew that that's what they'd be doing in the end.

The people who will be most attracted by their offers to let you live above your means are the very same people who are likely not to have a steady enough income and/or be responsible enough to make a payment on time every month. The people who can actually afford the stuff aren't going to consider in-house financing that often; they have their own credit lines, probably with an institution that they have a long relationship with, which offers fair interest with no hidden tricks or severe penalties for making mistakes.

GC doesn't want somebody with great credit to buy a $4000 guitar with 0% interest, make every payment on time, and end up with even better credit at the end of it. There are those who will do that, but those aren't the people that guitar center is banking on. They want someone with mediocre credit to buy a $1000-$2000 guitar, miss payments, void their 0% interest, incur ridiculous fees and interest, end up paying them twice what the guitar was worth when new, and have worse credit in the end. They make their money by keeping you in the hole, plain and simple.

You're almost always better off bringing your own financing into a purchase, even if it isn't 0%. The people behind these in-store credit lines are total snakes. And not to get to off-topic too much, but I believe that these sorts of in-house financing schemes have played a huge role in the loss of quality in American-made goods across the board over the past 30 to 40 years. That's because companies end up making more as lenders than they do as sellers of goods. Thus the focus on the products themselves wanes. It's one of the big issues that killed GM and Chrysler, and made their cars so crappy. Their operation became a predatory financing scheme first and foremost, with the cars existing only to serve the financing. The same goes for Guitar Center. Why would they ever bother inspecting, setting up, or returning flawed instruments to the manufacturers, when these issues don't affect Guitar Center's ability to sell loans, i.e. their ability to sell stuff for more than it is worth?
 
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Re: Guitar center new payment options

Exactly. They wouldn't do it if it wasn't beneficial to them. The cold hard truth is that from a retailer's point of view, "selling loans" is really nothing but selling things for more than they are worth.

The people who will be most attracted by their offers to let you live above your means are the very same people who are likely not to have a steady enough income and/or be responsible enough to make a payment on time every month. The people who can actually afford the stuff aren't going to consider in-house financing that often; they have their own credit lines, probably with an institution that they have a long relationship with, which offers fair interest with no hidden tricks or severe penalties for making mistakes.

GC doesn't want somebody with great credit to buy a $4000 guitar with 0% interest, make every payment on time, and end up with even better credit at the end of it. There are those who will do that, but those aren't the people that guitar center is banking on. They want someone with mediocre credit to buy a $1000-$2000 guitar, miss payments, void their 0% interest, incur ridiculous fees and interest, end up paying them twice what the guitar was worth when new, and have worse credit in the end. They make their money by keeping you in the hole, plain and simple.

You're almost always better off bringing your own financing into a purchase, even if it isn't 0%. The people behind these in-store credit lines are total snakes. And not to get to off-topic too much, but I believe that these sorts of in-house financing schemes have played a huge role in the loss of quality in American-made goods across the board over the past 30 to 40 years. That's because companies end up making more as lenders than they do as sellers of goods. Thus the focus on the products themselves wanes. It's one of the big issues that killed GM and Chrysler, and made their cars so crappy. Their operation became a predatory financing scheme first and foremost, with the cars existing only to serve the financing. The same goes for Guitar Center. Why would they ever bother inspecting, setting up, or returning flawed instruments to the manufacturers, when these issues don't affect Guitar Center's ability to sell loans, i.e. their ability to sell stuff for more than it is worth?

Kinda like pharmaceutical companies that profit from being being sick and medicines having side effects that need require medicine for those side effects and etc. ;)

Back on topic, yes–it can be a very helpful tool for someone who is responsible...not so much for irresponsible folks.
 
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