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Buick Surpasses Chevy As GM’s Real-World Value Leader

A red Buick Envista parked in front of some cool architectural structures.
A red Buick Envista parked in front of some cool architectural structures.

Chevy’s vintage slogan was The Heartbeat Of America and it very much was. Chevy has existed as The General’s entry-level value brand aimed at the everyman in America. Chevrolets are the hard-working, blue collar, good ol’ boys of the car market, but Chevy’s once snooty cousin Buick has recently started undoing its top buttons and hanging out at the local dive bar on weeknights.

For those who don’t leave the MotorWeek Retro Reviews YouTube playlist on shuffle when you fall asleep like me, Buick is intended to be one step higher on the prestige ladder than Chevrolet. Think of it like shopping at Target over Walmart, or eating at P.F. Chang’s over Panda Express– it’s nicer than the alternative, but you’re not at Saks Fifth Avenue or Nobu. General Motors does lots of cross-brand platform sharing as all big brands do, and the Buick versions used to be notably more upscale than the Chevy versions, but that has changed in recent years.

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This tells us people who walk into Buick dealers aren’t spending as much on options or higher trims as Chevy customers are. You could argue Buick’s trim structure discourages this with better standard equipment, but generally speaking, that’s the opposite of what you expect as prices go up. Pricier cars have more and costlier options—Porsche in particular is famous for its nickel-and-diming. But for some reason, Buick bucks the trend.

One reason might be that Chevy customers who aren’t after something aspirational like a Silverado HD ZR2 or Corvette might seek a deal that a lower MSRP promises. But because they feel like they’re saving money, they splurge a little more on options than a Buick buyer might. Perhaps the Buick badge is what buyers show up for, not what backs it up.

The above quote references the differential between the base price and the average transaction price of Buick and Chevy models that share the same platform. The Chevrolet Trailblazer and Buick Encore GX are twins under the skin; the base price of a Buick Encore GX is $3,800 higher than the base price of a Trailblazer, and yet the average transaction price shows only a $1,945 price differential between the two marques. The Chevrolet Traverse and Buick Enclave paint a similar picture, with the Enclave’s base price $10,280 higher than a base Traverse, but the average transaction price differential is only $7,637. This shows that Chevy buyers choose to add more options onto their new car than Buick buyers.