Having just run the car buying gauntlet, I can relate to your situation. I highly recommend that you do most of your shopping on the internet. Read the reviews, check the real blue book values and decide which make and model you want. Then you can go online and advise all the local dealers exactly what you're looking for and wait for the barrage of emails and phone calls. Get the lowest price from your research and let them know that whoever meets your needs first with make, model, color, price etc, gets the deal. They don't like this, but that's business. If you're planning on buying a newer model used car, check to see how it stacks up against a 2015 "leftover". I found that I could buy a brand new truck for cheaper than a new, used one. I ended up buying a new 2015 Toyota Tacoma and got over $4000 off of sticker price. The same truck new, used was $2000 more. Several dealers stated that they couldn't/wouldn't meet the price so I wished them luck. Also, if you're 'going to finance the car, have all of your financing worked out before you ever show up at any dealers even if it's just to test drive the car. By the way, I am also a big Toyota fan. My last vehicle was a 2000 Toyota 4Runner which I bought new and put over 347,000 miles on it before I sold it. I buy my vehicles for the long haul. Good luck and do your research and financing first. It really pays off in the end and makes the car shopping must less of a hassle.
Jim Smith