Almost Traded My 3rd Gen Tundra – But United Toyota’s Trade-In & Markup Changed My Mind

TRDLEGACY

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2023 TRD Off Road SR5 4X4
What’s up everyone,
Just wanted to share a recent experience I had at my local dealership, United Toyota, that had me seriously considering trading in my 2023 Tundra TRD Off-Road… until reality hit me right in the face.

Like many of us, I’ve been eyeing the 2025 TRD Pro ever since the leaks and early details started surfacing — updated features, new styling tweaks, and all the marketing hype about it being Toyota’s most trail-ready full-size truck yet. I figured it couldn’t hurt to swing by the dealership and see what kind of deal they’d offer me, especially since my current build is clean, well-maintained, and mildly upgraded.

I walked in expecting a reasonable conversation. I’m not naïve — I know dealers don’t hand out top-dollar on trade-ins, but I figured my 3rd Gen Tundra (only about 18 months old, with some solid upgrades like a Westcott lift, 35s, and aftermarket lighting) would fetch a decent number.

Nope.

They offered me way below what I still owe, let alone what the truck is actually worth on the private market. I get that mods don’t increase trade value much, but this wasn’t even close. The offer didn’t even take into account the condition, mileage, or demand for clean 3rd Gen Off-Roads — they just ran a generic number through the system and said “take it or leave it.”

But what really sealed the deal for me walking out? The markup on the 2025 TRD Pro.IMG_0506.png

Let’s just say I expected a little bump due to demand, but they were asking nearly $12K over MSRP. And this wasn’t for a launch edition or anything special — just a standard black TRD Pro with basic dealer adds like tint, door edge guards, and all-weather mats. That’s it.

I asked the salesperson straight up, “Why the massive markup?” His response was pretty much: “That’s just what people are paying right now.” It honestly felt like a slap in the face to loyal Toyota owners who keep coming back for reliability, quality, and resale value — but are now expected to take a huge loss on a solid trade-in and pay a premium on a new truck that isn’t that much better.

So I thanked them for their time, got in my truck, and as soon as I started driving home, I felt a wave of relief.

Because the truth is — I love my Tundra. It’s set up just the way I want it, performs great on and off the road, and still turns heads every time I take it out. The more I thought about it, the more I realized I’d be paying thousands just to start over… for a truck that I’d probably end up modifying all over again.

So, lesson learned: sometimes the best “upgrade” is appreciating what you already have. And with the way prices and trade values are going, I’ll be holding onto this rig for a while.

Anyone else have a similar experience lately? I’m curious to hear if trade-in values have been just as low in your area — or if anyone’s found a dealership actually offering fair deals.
 

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