It's the American way, how dare you.+ you're young and shit will happen. Living life budgeted to your last cent with no backup plan for emergencies is very foolish.
This is good advice. My first cars were $3500 and $2500, respectively, bought on incomes of $25k and $46k, respectively.Find a solid car for $4k and pay cash. Keep the extra 2k in reserve for repairs.
ok ok ok over the 12000 dollar car. Found a car I can afford, a 2004 corolla s with 113000 miles for 7500. He brought it down from 8000, its a small dealership. Clean interior, no dings dents on exterior. Its pretty high for for the mileage and I think i'm just paying for the name. What do you guys think?
You're young. Why don't you reverse the trend that the majority of people are in? Instead of purchasing cars and having your income reduced by interest, why don't you pay cash & let interest increase your income? Imagine how much farther you'll be ahead over your lifetime by earning 4% on what you make, rather than paying 10%?
Just purchase the 6k vehicle, and save your money from your job. If you want a nicer vehicle, then after you've saved enough + the trade/resale value of your current vehicle to purchase a newer car, get one then. On that $$$$$ that you spend, you'll have to earn less than that actual amount, since interest will accrue. The alternative is paying $$$$$ now via a loan and having to earn much more money because of interest accruing on the loan. Over the next 30 years, you'll come out 1000's ahead, if not 10's of 1000's.
Are you hell-bent on getting a newer car or something? You can get older cars with significantly less miles than that '04 Corolla.
Also, where are you located?
i bet you can't find two major loan companies that practice this. every company i've dealt with has accepted extra payments, from cars to mortgage to hardware supply.