Nobody in this country voices a console or studio piano as part of a normal sale.
Some sales include delivery and tuning, some don't. the store should tell you what your price buys at time of sale. As I lived 225 miles from the store, my new piano was sold explicitly without delivery or tuning. I could not take off work to meet a delivery man Monday-Friday 9-5. This got me $225 off the price card.
Voicing in this country is quite often not available except in large cities over 2 million, or from traveling techs that charge a lot for being 500 miles from home base so much and living in motels.
I'm not sure any tech in that rare category capable of voicing would want to waste his time on a console piano. He would try to refer you to a friend that sells grands. The fact that one doesn't have room in his house for a grand is another barrier to getting a visit from such a tech. No referrals to your rich friends would ensue.
When I did use the tech from the most prestigious dealer in town to tune my 2 year old Sohmer, the ******** dealer, he tuned my piano ~1/4 tone flat without explaining that to me. That drove me nuts trying play by ear to recordings. When I complained one note was flat in days after tuning he sold and installed an electric humidifier unit, despite my being located one mile from the Ohio river and not air conditioning my house fully. That humidifier did nothing. He did not discuss oversize pins, cardboard or pine tar in the pin hole, oversize pins, redrilling the pin block and putting in a sleeve, or any of the techniques I've discovered on this website. What a low skill tech, is my opinion - and the most expensive in town. Voicing from a tech like that? get real. Not unless the dealership made $$$$$ on the sale of that grand.