JackBurton
Lifer
🙄 What idiot told you that?
No shit.
🙄 What idiot told you that?
I do not agree with brand new.
I recently bought new and it has been a struggle for me to justify keeping it, but I think it's sorta paying off. I have had to do zero to my car since I got it in April of 2011 and that is more or less why I wanted it. If I was not commuting close to 50 miles one way to work I would still be driving one of my older cars I paid a few hundred for. If I were ever to get a job in town again first thing I'd do is put my 2011 car up for sale. Payments are lame.
Why do people talk about keeping a car for ten years? I couldn't imagine. I'm already looking at what's next after a year and a half. It's a struggle for me to keep one for two and half or three years.
Why do people talk about keeping a car for ten years? I couldn't imagine. I'm already looking at what's next after a year and a half. It's a struggle for me to keep one for two and half or three years.
Why do people talk about keeping a car for ten years? I couldn't imagine. I'm already looking at what's next after a year and a half. It's a struggle for me to keep one for two and half or three years.
Then either you have the income to justify buying new every few years or you like being deep in hock to cars. Which is it? I'm not faulting you either... if you have the cash reserves - are in great financial shape, no debt... etc... then go right ahead and buy the new vehicle when ever you desire.
I kept my last truck 13 years from new. Live in the south so that helps. Wanted to buy several new models over the years, but being debt free makes you even more of a miser.... Just bought a new truck in January... $36k... I put $24k down. That is the difference. I'll have this one paid off in a year or two and keep it 13+ years. Works for me.
It's really a function of how many miles you put on a car. If you are doing less than 10,000 miles a year you realistically can drive a car for 10 years and not do a whole lot more than gas, tires, and oil...as well as routine other things. If you paid in cash, or paid it off in the first couple years that's 7+ years of very low cost ownership.
If you are driving 30,000 miles a year then 10 likely isn't a realistic number.
All my life I've always heard that one should never buy a BRAND new car (unless money just flat out isn't an issue for you) because it's just really financially stupid.
You buy a car and have say a $500 payment. After two or three years you're at the point where you can trade it in and get something new with the same payment. I'm not in a hurry to pay off a car. I see it as just another monthly bill like everything else. I plan to always have a car payment.
I don't like to keep them long because of all the road salt either. trade them before they rust and their value plummets. Warranties too. I get extended warranties, and trade just before they are up.