Automaker incentives can reduce the purchase price, lower the cost of financing, or give a dealer more room to negotiate. But every program has dates, geography, eligible models, and qualification rules.
The useful question is not simply “What incentives exist?” It is “Which combination produces the lowest total cost for this buyer, this vehicle, and this transaction?”
How do new car incentives work?
A new car incentive is a temporary offer used by an automaker, lender, government, or dealer to encourage a sale. Customer cash generally reduces the price; promotional APR reduces borrowing cost; loyalty and conquest bonuses reward specific ownership histories; dealer cash goes to the dealership and may create negotiation room. Do not assume every advertised incentive can be combined.
Six common new car incentive types
Read the program name, the recipient, and the conditions before treating an offer as part of your budget.
Cash rebate
A manufacturer-funded amount applied for the eligible buyer. It typically reduces the agreed price or the amount financed, subject to tax treatment in your state.
Promotional APR
A below-market loan rate, often through the automaker’s captive finance company. Strong credit, a specific term, and an eligible model may be required.
Dealer cash
Money paid by the automaker to the dealer for an eligible sale. It may increase negotiating flexibility, but the dealer generally does not have to disclose or pass through the full amount.
Loyalty bonus
An offer for buyers or households that currently own or lease the same brand, or sometimes a related brand. Proof and ownership timing rules apply.
Conquest bonus
An offer intended to switch buyers from a competing brand. The program defines qualifying makes, registration status, household rules, and required documents.
Military, responder, graduate, or partner
Targeted programs may apply to verified military members, first responders, recent graduates, employees, or partner organizations. Conditions vary widely.
What determines whether you qualify
Vehicle and location rules
- Exact model, model year, trim, powertrain, or stock status
- Buyer ZIP code or dealer region
- Purchase versus lease
- New, untitled vehicle status
- Contract and delivery by the program deadline
Buyer and financing rules
- Credit tier and approved lender
- Loan term and required down payment
- Current qualifying vehicle ownership or lease
- Household relationship and address
- Membership, employment, graduation, or service documentation
Ask for the program code and expiration date
A salesperson’s summary is useful, but the written buyer’s order should identify every incentive included in the price. If an offer depends on financing, ask for the APR, term, amount financed, and whether selecting it removes a cash rebate.
Can new car incentives be stacked?
Sometimes. Compatibility is controlled by each program, so treat “stackable” as a fact to verify, not an assumption.
| Combination | Often possible? | What to verify |
|---|---|---|
| Customer cash + loyalty | Sometimes | Whether the bonus is compatible with the public rebate |
| Customer cash + conquest | Sometimes | Eligible competitor brands and household documentation |
| Cash rebate + promotional APR | Often either/or | Compare the cash offer with the low-rate offer over the same term |
| Dealer discount + factory incentive | Often | Make sure the advertised dealer discount is not just a bundle of conditional rebates |
| Multiple affinity bonuses | Varies | Program exclusions and one-per-household rules |
Watch for an “everyone qualifies” price that almost no one receives
An advertised price may subtract military, graduate, loyalty, conquest, trade-assistance, and finance bonuses at once. Ask the dealer to rebuild the price using only the programs you personally qualify for.
How to use incentives without losing the negotiation
1. Research the vehicle before the incentive
Identify the exact model and options, then compare invoice price and MSRP. A large rebate does not automatically make a high selling price competitive.
2. Negotiate the dealer selling price
Ask for the price before government charges and before conditional incentives. This reveals the dealer’s actual discount.
3. Apply only verified incentives
List every offer, amount, program name, eligibility requirement, and expiration date. Separate customer programs from dealer support.
4. Compare cash and financing on equal terms
Use the same vehicle price, down payment, taxes, fees, and loan term. Compare total interest and total paid, not monthly payment alone.
5. Confirm the final out-the-door price
Review the buyer’s order for add-ons or fees that erase the incentive. Use our out-the-door price guide, run the numbers with the out-the-door price calculator, then compare new car quotes on the same structure.
Want the incentive to mean something?
Anchor the deal with invoice pricing first. Then apply only the incentives you can verify and compare the complete transaction.
Start My Pricing ResearchThree offers that look similar, but are not
$2,500 customer cash
The rebate lowers the effective price, but the standard loan may carry more interest. Compare it against any promotional APR.
1.9% APR for 36 months
The rate may save more than the rebate, but the shorter term can require a larger payment and stronger credit.
$3,000 dealer discount
Ask how much is a true dealer discount and how much assumes conditional rebates. Your personalized quote may be different.
Build the price first. Then layer in the right incentive.
A clean invoice-price benchmark makes it easier to see whether a rebate, dealer discount, or low-rate offer genuinely improves the deal.
New car incentive FAQs
What is the difference between a rebate and dealer cash?
A customer rebate is an offer intended for an eligible buyer. Dealer cash is paid to the dealership and may create pricing flexibility, but the dealer generally does not have to pass the full amount to the buyer.
Can I combine a cash rebate with 0% APR?
Often the buyer must choose between customer cash and promotional financing, but program rules vary. Request both written scenarios and compare the total cost.
Does everyone qualify for the advertised incentive?
No. Incentives can depend on model, ZIP code, contract date, credit tier, lender, ownership history, occupation, membership, or other conditions.
Is a loyalty bonus limited to the person on the title?
Program rules differ. Some allow household eligibility at the same address, while others require a specific registered owner or lessee. Ask what documentation is required.
Should I tell the dealer about my incentives before negotiating?
Verify available programs early, but ask for the dealer selling price before conditional incentives. Then apply only the offers you qualify for and compare the final out-the-door total.
Sources and editorial note
- Kelley Blue Book: Complete Guide to New Car Incentives (incentive types, eligibility, and cash-versus-finance context)
- Cox Automotive: May 2026 New-Vehicle Inventory (current supply and incentive context)
Information reviewed July 13, 2026. Vehicle programs, lender qualifications, dealer practices, and state rules can change. Confirm the numbers and terms on your written quote and purchase agreement.