From building a buying plan to sourcing, reconditioning, pricing, advertising, and F&I — here is how to build a used inventory program that actually works.
↗ This is part of the DAG Inventory StrategyA used inventory program without a defined buying plan, a clear sourcing strategy, and the right F&I products will consistently underperform — regardless of market conditions.
The used car market is hot. New cars are more expensive than ever, which leaves consumers looking for less expensive alternatives. So how do you ensure your dealership offers a healthy used inventory, can secure financing for your customers, and maximizes back-end profit on every deal?
The answer starts with a plan — and most dealers either don't have one or don't follow it consistently.
Start With a Defined Buying Plan
Every dealer should start with a defined buying plan. This plan looks different for each dealer based on their market, lender relationships, and lot capacity. Before anything else, work through these questions:
- What kinds of vehicles do your customers want — and which ones move the fastest?
- What vehicles are eligible for your top three lenders' programs? Do they have year, mileage, or price limitations?
- What price points see the most success for your customer base?
- Are you building or expanding a subprime department — and what vehicles do you need to get there?
- How long can you afford to keep a vehicle? Set a hard lot age rule and enforce it.
The buying plan is a living document. If a strategy is not working, adjust it. But do not move forward without one.
The Four Sources: Pros and Cons
Auction
Your most reliable source. Work both in-person and online. Use a defined buying guide so your team knows exactly what to pursue — and use the auction kick policy without hesitation. If a vehicle does not meet your standards on arrival, kick it. Speed matters more than sentiment.
Trade
Take every trade that comes in. A customer is more likely to buy from you if you provide a fair trade-in price. If the vehicle falls outside your buying plan, wholesale it. If you purchased it correctly on trade, you should not lose money.
Private
One of the key factors in Carvana's success is how easy they make the private purchase process. What would happen if you marketed that your dealership will buy any car? Combined with a strong trade mentality, you would see a significant increase in available inventory at favorable prices.
Wholesale
A smart release valve for inventory that does not fit your plan. Do not agonize over the decision. If a vehicle is past your lot age or does not fit your buying plan, move it. The longer it sits, the more it costs you.
Reconditioning: In-House vs. Out-Sourced
In-house reconditioning gives you control over costs and turnaround, but requires space and talent. Out-sourced reconditioning may cost slightly more but works well when you have clear communication and defined approval limits with your vendors. Either way — get the vehicle reconditioned fast so it can be priced and listed.
Pricing Your Used Inventory
Pricing is the make-or-break factor. If your buying plan was inaccurate or a vehicle was purchased outside of it, losses can compound quickly across reconditioning, floor plan, and eventual wholesale. Dealers who use real-time market data to price competitively from day one consistently see better turn rates than those who price high and adjust over time.
Getting Customers in the Door
- If you get strong lot traffic: make sure vehicles are clean, your best units are at the front, and the lot feels full.
- If customers start on your website: every new vehicle should be added within 48 hours with quality photos.
- Third-party sites like Autotrader appear near the top of used car searches and consistently drive inbound leads for dealers who use them.
F&I Products for Used Vehicles
Not every used vehicle is eligible for the same products as new inventory, and your reinsurance structure may affect which products make sense. Preloads, appearance protection, and service contracts with well-defined limits tend to perform well on used deals. That seven-year-old sedan may not be your dream car — but it is someone's. Offering quality F&I products ensures every customer leaves feeling their investment is protected.
At Dealer Advantage Group, we partner with a leading inventory management company and Experian to give our dealer partners real data on what is moving in their specific market — combined with their lender program requirements so they are always buying the right cars for every financing situation. This is not generic advice. We build a customized inventory strategy around your store, your customers, and your numbers. And we provide it at no charge to our dealer partners. Proven systems, customized to your dealership, implemented with your team.
Start with your data. Look at what has sold in the last 90 days — what moved fast, what aged, what your lenders will and will not finance. Layer in your customer demographics and price point sweet spots. Set hard rules: maximum lot age, mileage limits, price ceilings. The plan should be written, shared with your buying team, and reviewed monthly.
Both — but for different reasons. Auctions give you flexibility to source specific vehicle types that match your buying plan. Trades build customer loyalty and often produce inventory at favorable cost. The dealers who perform best use auctions as their primary source and treat every trade as an opportunity to serve the customer and stock the lot.
Preloads, appearance protection, and service contracts with well-defined limits tend to perform well on used inventory. Not every used vehicle qualifies for the same products as new inventory, and your reinsurance structure may affect which products make sense. DAG evaluates each dealer's situation individually.