(TestMiles) - If you think you’ve heard every tip on how to save when buying a new car, think again. The automotive landscape in 2025 is shifting, and with it, the best savings aren’t always front-page headlines. From playful bonus cash to unseen loyalty rebates and clever lease terms, you can unlock significant savings in what you pay each month, what you finance, or what you walk away owing. Why does this matter right now? For the first time in years, new-car incentives are reappearing and many buyers aren’t ready. While high interest rates and supply disruptions once muted deals, inventories are gently loosening and manufacturers are deploying creative offers. Knowing where the hidden savings lie gives you the upper hand. Consider the end of the federal EV tax credit. With fewer automatic incentives, stacking lesser-known deals becomes more important. That’s precisely what this list offers: ten smart tactics you likely haven’t heard, yet. How does it compare to rivals? Most advice you’ll encounter focuses on “advertised” rebates, low-APR financing or loyalty programs. But the real advantage comes from digging into hidden offers: supplier pricing, unseen dealer cash, smart lease terms, and bonus campaigns with quirky execution. If your employer is a partner or supplier to an automaker, you might qualify for affiliate pricing that rivals standard rebates. Loyalty and conquest incentives give you an edge whether you’re staying with or switching brands. And “dealer cash” (manufacturer-to-dealer incentives) is often invisible unless you ask. For example, one recent story at TestMiles covered how trade/tariff shifts further complicate the pricing game making hidden incentives more valuable than ever. So yes this matters, and it gives you a sharper toolset at the showroom. Who is this for and who should skip it? These tactics are ideal for buyers who are ready, budget-savvy, and willing to ask questions. If you’re in the market now or soon, want to reduce your monthly payment, or want to buy at closer-to-invoice rather than near-MSRP, this is for you. If you’re still just browsing, not buying for a year, or locked on one model regardless of cost, you might not benefit as much. And if you’re buying used or certified pre-owned only, many of the new-car incentives won’t apply. For example: the campaign by Jeep using Monopoly play money, offering $500 off a new 2025 Grand Cherokee. It works but only if you hit the model and timing. If not, move on but keep the mindset. What is the long-term significance? We’re entering a vehicle buying era where incentives become more fragmented, more creative and more conditional. Buyers who know how to stack lesser-known deals will win. Manufacturers are now shifting profit models. Incentives will be applied more precisely: loyalty, brand-switching, fleet ties, strategic financing rather than broad public offers. As a consumer, the savvy ones will lock in favorable terms now, reducing long-term payment and ownership risk. Much of the ownership cost of a car today isn’t just sticker price. It’s interest, monthly payment, residual value and depreciation. By harnessing these hidden savings now, you’re reducing those long-term burdens. And now: the ten tactics you should ask about when you walk into the dealership. Use them, stack them and leave the lot feeling like you out-negotiated the system. These tactics give you more leverage than simply asking, “What’s your best price?” As noted, timing and stacking matter more than ever. In short: walk in with knowledge, ask subtle questions, bring your Monopoly game money (yes, really) and you’ll likely leave the lot smarter and with a better deal than most buyers.