You're not buying
from a chain. You're
buying from
the Ferons.
Three and a half decades in the car business. Two generations running the floor. One family that lives where you live — and builds dealerships they'd want to walk into themselves.
The Showroom Floor
A career built one deal
at a time — and a dealership
built to last.
Rob Feron started selling cars in 1989. What came next is 35 years of learning the business the right way — and nearly 20 of those years planted firmly in north Louisiana.
Decisions get made here. Not in Dallas. Not in Detroit.
This is a family-run operation in the truest sense of the word. Rob Feron is the dealer principal. His son Robert is the General Manager of Courtesy Chevrolet Buick GMC. His son Christopher runs the CDJR store down the road. Three Ferons. Three decision-makers. Zero corporate middlemen.
Here's why that matters when you're writing a check for a new Silverado or signing a lease on a Sierra: family-owned stores make decisions differently. We're not trying to hit a quarterly number for a board in another state. We're trying to earn a customer who'll bring their son in for his first truck ten years from now.
That changes how we price, how we trade, and how we handle a problem when something goes sideways — because it eventually does, and what matters is who shows up to fix it.
Two showrooms.
One town. No accidents.
Nobody builds two brand-new dealerships in a town this size by accident. Every expansion means more local jobs, more local technicians, and more reason to do this right the first time. That's what a real community dealership looks like — not a slogan, a balance sheet.
Seven reasons the smart money
buys in Ruston.
Come see us. Walk the lot. Meet the Ferons.
If you're shopping a new Silverado, a Sierra, a Tahoe, an Enclave, or anything else wearing a GM badge — you have options up and down I-20. What you don't have is another dealer owned by a family that's been in Ruston almost 20 years, with two sons running the stores, and a reputation they're not willing to trade for a short-term win.
[Hours To Confirm]