How to get a Gibson guitar for half price

This article was last updated on May 25, 2022

Canada: Free $30 Oye! Times readers Get FREE $30 to spend on Amazon, Walmart…
USA: Free $30 Oye! Times readers Get FREE $30 to spend on Amazon, Walmart…Buying a new guitar during a dealer promotion can double the cost. Buying an almost-new guitar on Kijiji is about half price.

April is Gibson Guitar Month promotion (Long and McQuade illustration)

Like me, you’re probably tempted by ads touting “April is Gibson Guitar Month”. You may end up paying double what the guitar is worth.

if you take the easy bi-weekly payment terms, the guitar will cost twice as much as it should.

There are much better ways to save on that new guitar like an almost-new guitar on Kijiji or dealer B-stock.

Gibson J-45 on bi-weekly payments will double your cost (illustration Long and McQuade amount may vary)

In the Long and McQuade ad that came in my email, the Gibson J-45 is offered at $2,175. That’s the street price for theGibson J-45 Standard so nothing special there.

Below that are the time payments of $41 bi-weekly which seems cheap, an amount anyone can afford.

Add up the payments and it comes to $3,195.

That is a lot of money for a Gibson J-45 Standard.

Financing charges are a big profit center for chain music stores. There’s nothing evil in that: it’s just not good sense for consumers.

You can easily get the same guitar for half price.

The moment you leave the store with your new, easy-payment guitar it’s worth about $1,600 on Kijiji or from a dealer as B-stock.

Last year I bought a Gibson Southern Jumbo for a total price of $2,500. I sold it on Kijiji for $1,850 seven months later.

There wasn’t a mark on the Gibson SJ. That’s just the way the price drops on used guitars.

So for the casual thrill of owning a brand new Gibson guitar on expensive time payments, you fork over double the money.

A better deal is a used instrument on Kijiji or a B-stock J-45 for $1,589 on ZZ Sounds. The J-45 is a common guitar and deals on used, rental or B-stock are always on the go.

B-stock usually means the guitar has a small blemish. The moment you play the new guitar it will have belt-rash, pick scratches or a neck mark from the guitar stand. It does not affect the sound.

Some unscrupulous dealers sell B-stock as first grade guitars. I can’t name them or they might sue me but I know it happens. Sales people have told me. The regional manager of a large music store chain tossed off “Let the buyer beware” reminding me they were not obliged to tell the customer anything.

Another way to save money are “no interest” deals. Of course the payments are higher but you are saving money. There is a danger if you miss a payment they can slap tons on interest on your account.

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