Woman picks out car and gets financing but then offers a mode of payment that leaves the dealership floored – We Got This Covered
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RobbtheCarGuy via TikTok
RobbtheCarGuy via TikTok

Woman picks out car and gets financing but then offers a mode of payment that leaves the dealership floored

The one form of payment the dealer COULDN'T take.

A car dealer says a customer drove two hours, got approved for financing, picked out a vehicle, and completed paperwork. However, the deal took an unexpected turn when she offered an unusual form of down payment.

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Car salesman RobbTheCarGuy (@robbthecarguy), shared the experience in a viral TikTok video where he tells stories from inside the car sales industry and explains how financing deals work. In the video, he began bluntly: “Customer offer me food stamps as a down payment.” He explained that the customer had traveled a long distance specifically to buy a car and had already been approved for financing after submitting a credit application. “So I had a customer come two hours away to buy a car. Two hours away. They put in a credit app. We got them approved. You know how we do? Work, work, work.”

According to him, the car dealership completes most of the paperwork before collecting the down payment, which is why the issue didn’t come up until the very end of the process. “Now it’s time to collect the down payment. We always wait till the end. I don’t know why, but that’s just what we do,” Robb said.

The down payment itself was relatively small — just $432 — which he said is often enough to get many buyers approved for financing. “We get everybody approved. It ain’t no thing,” he added.

“We take Zelle”

But when it was time to pay, he said the customer began making excuses and claimed she had left her wallet in an Uber. He said she pretended to call the rideshare driver for nearly an hour while trying to figure out another way to pay. He then told her the dealership accepted multiple digital payment options. “We take Zelle, we take Cash App, we take Apple Pay, we take Venmo, we take PayPal. Yo, I’ll take anything you want,” Robb said.

That’s when the situation took a turn that he said he didn’t expect. According to Robb, “She’s like, I got my EBT card. Okay. You take food stamps? Yeah. All right. Um, I’ll give you $430.” Robb never revealed if he got the deal done.

EBT, or Electronic Benefits Transfer, is the system used to distribute SNAP benefits, commonly known as food stamps. Those benefits are legally restricted to food purchases such as groceries and non-alcoholic beverages, and they cannot be used for non-food items, bills, or large purchases like cars or down payments.

In the video, the dealer joked about accepting the benefits at a discounted value similar to how some people exchange benefits for groceries, but ultimately refused the offer. “It’s 50 Cent on a dollar, sweetheart. Supply and demand. And right now, you got the supply with a limited demand.”

How does car dealership financing work?

In the comments, viewers wondered about how car financing actually works and how dealerships get paid when a buyer finances a vehicle instead of paying cash.

One commenter asked, “Do you get paid from the bank and they make payments to the bank?” Another responded, “With $400 down he’s definitely letting the bank take the payments,” while a third explained, “Bank cuts check directly to Rob, they take a fee to write the deal from the Net check in most cases it’s $700-1400 depending on customer rating score.”

That explanation is generally accurate. In most financed car purchases, a lender or bank pays the dealership for the vehicle upfront, and the customer then makes monthly payments to the lender over time. The down payment helps reduce the loan amount and can improve the chances of approval, especially for buyers with lower credit scores.

In this case, however, the financing approval wasn’t the problem — the down payment was. And according to the dealer, offering food stamps instead of cash or digital payment left him completely stunned and turned what looked like a completed car deal into a viral internet story instead.


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Author
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William Kennedy
William Kennedy is a full-time freelance content writer and journalist in Eugene, OR. William covered true crime, among other topics for Grunge.com. He also writes about live music for the Eugene Weekly, where his beat also includes arts and culture, food, and current events. He lives with his wife, daughter, and two cats who all politely accommodate his obsession with Doctor Who and The New Yorker.