Welcome to Auto Haus, Inc., located in the resort town
of Naples, Florida. All of the cars we advertise are located
at our dealership. Please feel free to stop by and visit us
in person or on the web. A licensed and bonded dealer,
Auto Haus, Inc. has over 25 years experience in the
luxury car industry. We're staffed by knowledgeable
professionals and employ a low-pressure sales approach.
Vehicle Description
Offered for sale is an incredible example of the luxurious, sporty, practical, and reliable 5-passenger Q5 from Audi, a 2010 Premium Plus model with the S-Line package and 20" rims! This immaculate SUV is loaded with standard and optional equipment such as navigation, backup camera, heated power leather seats, panoramic sunroof, 3.2 liter V6 with Audi's AWD Quattro system, Blutooth, Band & Olufsen sound, and much more. This is one very serious vehicle, and has tons of curb appeal. Phone us at (239) 273-1150 or (239) 261-3600 for sales information.
Auto Haus, Inc. has great financing specials for qualified buyers with rates as low as 2.94% on very late model cars, with only mildly increasing rates on prior years. We also offer GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL for any applicant, regardless of credit history. You can apply on-line, and will receive an answer by the next business day. We take trade-ins at fair market value and can help arrange shipping to anywhere in the world. All Auto Haus, Inc. vehicles are fully inspected at our Bosch Certified Workshop, and serviced as required prior to sale. They are professionally detailed, photographed, and offered for sale both on the Internet and locally at our convenient location on at Airport Pulling Road North, Naples FL 34104. Call us at (239) 273-1150 or (239) 261-3600 for more details or to schedule a test drive. We can promise your next car buying experience will be fair, pleasant, and satisfying. Call or stop by today!
Additional Photos
Please call us at
(239) 273-1150 or (239) 261-3600
for more information, or email us directly at cars@autohausfl.com
Please call us at
(239) 273-1150 or (239) 261-3600
for more information, or email us directly at cars@autohausfl.com
Terms Of Sale: In-State buyers must also pay sales tax
and registration fees. Out-of-State buyers may register and
pay applicable taxes in their home state. All buyers will be
charged a $200 documentation fee. All bidders must have
pre-approved loans/financing or must be able to pay cash in
person for the vehicle. Financing must be secured prior to
bidding. Payment must be made by certified check or bank to
bank transfer. Buyer is responsible for all shipping costs.
Remember that your bid constitutes a legally binding contract
to purchase this car. Please do not bid if you're not seriously
interested or financially able to purchase this car.
In the future, cars will drive us. And probably not surprisingly, they'll often know where to go without us even needing to tell them. That's the theme of a short back-and-forth conversation on Twitter recently between Tesla founder and CEO Elon Musk and a user who tagged him in a comment suggesting that "it would be cool" to be able to tell a car where to go. Responding to user James Harvey, Musk replied, "It won't even need to ask you most of the time." Later, after Harvey asked how the car would know where he wants to go, another user suggested that the car would know what time you go to work. "Yeah, don't exactly need to be Sherlock Holmes," Musk tweeted. It won't even need to ask you most of the time — Elon Musk (@elonmusk) October 21, 2017 Yeah, don't exactly need to be Sherlock Holmes. — Elon Musk (@elonmusk) October 21, 2017 That the ability to know where we're going will be part of our future driving experience shouldn't be surprising. After all, the smartphones we carry around already possess the ability to predict what we want — think Google's cleverness in tailoring search results or providing traffic information just before your commute, Facebook's highly customized News Feed content or even auto-fill technology, which can predict the words you're typing. And plenty of automakers have been touting their own work in developing in-car artificial intelligence systems. Like Audi's Elaine concept, which will be able to learn, think and even empathize with drivers. Or Mitsubishi's e-Evolution concept, which can not only assist your driving, but also assess your skills and teach you how to improve them. Tesla's vehicles, of course, are being outfitted with all the latest autonomous driver-assist technology, with the automaker eager to one day reach full Level 5 self-driving capability. According to Inc., Teslas will be able to listen and respond to directional commands, and they'll even have access to your calendar to comb for information about where you need to go. Tesla has also said it's developing an update to its Autopilot hardware and remains on track to achieve full Level 5 autonomous driving by the end of this year, which strikes a lot of people as wildly unrealistic. At any rate, the promise of cars knowing what time we're sneaking out to get donuts or picking up the kids is interesting, coming from the man who has warned that AI presents "a fundamental risk to the existence of human civilization."Related Video:
Audi has been rolling out successive concepts based on the new TT. Aside from the production coupe and convertible, we've seen the Shooting Brake concept in Detroit, the Offroad concept in Beijing and, most recently, the Sportback concept in Paris. The clear message is that Audi plans on actually producing more derivatives of its stylish two-door, but the question is which one will come first? Speaking with Britain's Car magazine in Paris this past week, Audi technical chief Ulrich Hackenberg indicated that, while the decision has still yet to be made, the crossover is the most likely candidate. Producing the TT Offroad concept - or something like it - would give Ingolstadt another addition to its growing crossover lineup that already includes the Q3, Q5 and Q7. Whether this would come in addition to or instead of the rumored Q1 and Q4 models remains to be seen, but crossovers have become increasingly popular and profitable for German automakers like Audi.
Automobile has a lengthy piece this month on how the four German mass-market luxury manufacturers each plan to go after Tesla with their own electric vehicles. It was written by Georg Kacher, the magazine's European bureau chief, and the English version came a month after he wrote the German-language original for Autobild. Tesla isn't exactly a threat to the Germans, but, according to the report, the Model S is planting the right kinds of seeds in niches that are important to the luxury players. The thinking is that - in addition to needed electric vehicles anyway for stricter US regulations - it's better to start designing the machinery now. The article posited Porsche's attack would rest on the coming Panamera platform, but a big hurdle would be battery placement. Unable to find one large space for a lithium-ion pack, engineers would instead put batteries everywhere they could, for a supposed tally of some "108 battery pouches" throughout the body. A few days after the Automobile piece, however, Porsche publicly said it had no intention of challenging the Model S, because the enthusiastic driving the brand is known for doesn't jive with useful range. In Kacher's retelling, Mercedes' plans are even more ambitious, supposedly taking aim at the Model S and the coming Model X. It would do this with an investment in excess of $2 billion in a program called "Ecoluxe" – Mercedes has no brand division akin to BMW's i and Audi's e-tron. The new brand would create a four-strong family of bespoke electric vehicles: a smaller platform with a wheelbase around 106 inches and a larger one with a wheelbase around 118 inches. In addition, the range would have "provisions for rear-wheel drive, all-wheel drive, and rear-wheel steering." The numbers are impressive: seating for seven in the larger vehicles, both longer than 16 feet, front and rear storage areas, ratings of up to 610 horsepower and production capacity of 80,000 units per year. When would we see such creatures? Perhaps as soon as 2019. We do know that if Tesla can knock the Model X over the outfield fence, automakers are going to have to do something. We don't know what the chances are that Ecoluxe is Mercedes' first move - but such a plan could help explain the weird Mercedes concept spied in October.