I bought my house when I was 23, my fiancee was only 20 at the time.we'll i'm only 22 so i'm not buying a house.
The tax benefits are amazing. Not to mention you aren't throwing $700 a month into a bottomless hole, never to be seen again.
I bought my house when I was 23, my fiancee was only 20 at the time.we'll i'm only 22 so i'm not buying a house.
22.... did you call your insurance agent and ask how much full coverage would be for you especially for a BMW??Originally posted by: Davegod75
we'll i'm only 22 so i'm not buying a house.
Being practical i know i should stick to a 20-25 car but i'm obsessed with the 3 series beamer. I've done the payment calculator and I would putting up a huge down payment to lower the payments to 500/month.
Originally posted by: Pixelated
Originally posted by: bmacd
Originally posted by: Dark4ng3l
I'd say probably a little over 100k a year...
ouch. Do me, do me. I make $30k/year, have school payments of around $2000/4X a year ($8k yearly), another $6k left on my truck, $6370 yearly car insurance rates (at the moment...probably going up REAL soon), and...small credit card bills. No kids..no wives..i really don't buy too much food. Still living with my parents.
-=bmacd=-
whoa! over $6k a year in auto insurance???? you probably need to age another 8-10 years, get married to bring it down.
that hurts...
Originally posted by: vi_edit
I bought my house when I was 23, my fiancee was only 20 at the time.we'll i'm only 22 so i'm not buying a house.
The tax benefits are amazing. Not to mention you aren't throwing $700 a month into a bottomless hole, never to be seen again.
I don't consider renting a waste. Most people do but your paying for a roof over your head, and a certain degree of living. True you don't get the tax breaks or the investment value but you have a place to live. Besides buying a house is a massive decision and often much more costly than renting.
Originally posted by: Davegod75
we'll i'm only 22 so i'm not buying a house.
Being practical i know i should stick to a 20-25 car but i'm obsessed with the 3 series beamer. I've done the payment calculator and I would putting up a huge down payment to lower the payments to 500/month.
Originally posted by: Davegod75
we'll i'm only 22 so i'm not buying a house.
Being practical i know i should stick to a 20-25 car but i'm obsessed with the 3 series beamer. I've done the payment calculator and I would putting up a huge down payment to lower the payments to 500/month.
Originally posted by: PSYWVic
Originally posted by: Davegod75
we'll i'm only 22 so i'm not buying a house.
Being practical i know i should stick to a 20-25 car but i'm obsessed with the 3 series beamer. I've done the payment calculator and I would putting up a huge down payment to lower the payments to 500/month.
😕 😕
Wha? Ok, to get your payments down to $500/mo. (once again assuming 5.9%, if you can get a better rate over 60 months, I wanna know where), you would need to put ~$12,700 down. If you have that much available to put down on a 3-series, but a fscking house instead. Let me put this in perspective: house = best investment you can ever make, fancy car = worst investment you can ever make.
Forget the obsession. Be pratical.
Originally posted by: RossMAN
Originally posted by: Davegod75
we'll i'm only 22 so i'm not buying a house.
Being practical i know i should stick to a 20-25 car but i'm obsessed with the 3 series beamer. I've done the payment calculator and I would putting up a huge down payment to lower the payments to 500/month.
How much exactly is a huge down payment?
Are you doing a 2, 3, 4, or 5 year term?
What interest rate are you hoping to get?
Originally posted by: vi_edit
Monthly car payments shouldn't exceed 15% of monthly net income IMHO.
Most banks don't even like HOME loanpayments to be over 33% of annual income.Originally posted by: Ameesh
Originally posted by: vi_edit
Monthly car payments shouldn't exceed 15% of monthly net income IMHO.
that seems a little on the low side.
Originally posted by: Davegod75
Originally posted by: RossMAN
Originally posted by: Davegod75
we'll i'm only 22 so i'm not buying a house.
Being practical i know i should stick to a 20-25 car but i'm obsessed with the 3 series beamer. I've done the payment calculator and I would putting up a huge down payment to lower the payments to 500/month.
How much exactly is a huge down payment?
Are you doing a 2, 3, 4, or 5 year term?
What interest rate are you hoping to get?
15k
5 years to keep payments low
6.35 (bmw performance loan rate for excellent credit)
Originally posted by: RossMAN
Originally posted by: Davegod75
Originally posted by: RossMAN
Originally posted by: Davegod75
we'll i'm only 22 so i'm not buying a house.
Being practical i know i should stick to a 20-25 car but i'm obsessed with the 3 series beamer. I've done the payment calculator and I would putting up a huge down payment to lower the payments to 500/month.
How much exactly is a huge down payment?
Are you doing a 2, 3, 4, or 5 year term?
What interest rate are you hoping to get?
15k
5 years to keep payments low
6.35 (bmw performance loan rate for excellent credit)
I would advise against buying a brand new BMW 3 series although it's the most awesomest car on the planet I would not do it, having said that here's what to expect.
$38,635 - $15,000 down payment = $23,365.00 amount financed @ 6.35% for 5 years = $455.52 monthly payments
plus any applicable fees, taxes, insurance or other weird stuff
Most financial institutions which do the underwriting for new car dealerships prefer a DSR (debt to service ratio) of 40% or less, I say shoot for 35% or less.
So $455.52 plus $500 per month rent = $955.52 per month credit obligations
$955.52 / 40% = $2,388.80 per month gross income x 12 months = $28,665.60
This seems way to low and is a borderline approval, just to be safe I would do a more "realistic" calculation of:
$500 car payment + $500 per month rent + $200 misc credit bills = $1,200
$1,200 / 35% = $3,428.57 per month gross income x 12 months = $41,142.86
So my guess is around $45k and you should be ok assuming all the other variables listed above.
<--- Former loan officer.