I dont understand how you are paying 380 a month on a car that cheap and are upside down, you either paid sticker, got a real shitty interest rate, or both.
We'll need notes outlining this procedure, but what to call them? :hmm:
Drive it off a cliff
If you do want to total it and collect on GAP insurance for the loan difference, there are bodyshops that can do that for you, basically involves "destruction of high cost accessories" airbags, glass, etc. and leaving all major mechanicals so you get maximum salvage value. Your ins company will total based on % of cars value. Of course you need comp cvg, less ded....In NYC they are so worried about pip/liab fraud from the russians, the 1st party PD stuff is small potatoes.
Agreed...does seem really odd.
If the car costs $14K and you had 21% interest (is that even possible) over 5 years...you'd get to $380 a month. It makes me shudder to think the OP has such a high interest rate or even paid $14K or more for a Versa. If he OP has a shorter loan period to justify the loan amount...I don't see how he could be underwater.
Or he rolled a previous car loan into the Versa's loan. Perpetual cycle of debt.
All the people telling him to sell, I thought you couldn't sell a car which had a loan on it? The title doesn't belong to you.
All the people telling him to sell, I thought you couldn't sell a car which had a loan on it? The title doesn't belong to you.
You would be 'in the hole' either way. If the bank repossesses the car and auctions it off for squat, then it will come after you for the difference. Better that you sell it yourself.
And . . . $380/mo for a Versa?! $120/mo for insurance for a Versa?!
The attitude that fuelled this thread is a prime example of the trend towards Americans refusing to accept personal responsibility for their decisions. This has resulted ultimately in your ridiculous government enforced lending policies where people are entitled to walk away from home loans when they get underwater, which creates a vicious cycle, further forcing prices down, and is what will lead to an extended period of very poor performance in the housing market.
Not to mention the cause of the housing slump in the first place, which again is government policies forcing banks to lend to people who weren't credit-worthy in the first place.
Once again, LOLAmerica.
maybe just go with liability? I dropped full coverage before my loan was done and the finance company never said one word when I did.
you do investments with more countries than just America, but They still do business with them any ways even though we are in the red....So, Lol at your country, which is also in the red.
The attitude that fuelled this thread is a prime example of the trend towards Americans refusing to accept personal responsibility for their decisions. This has resulted ultimately in your ridiculous government enforced lending policies where people are entitled to walk away from home loans when they get underwater, which creates a vicious cycle, further forcing prices down, and is what will lead to an extended period of very poor performance in the housing market.
Not to mention the cause of the housing slump in the first place, which again is government policies forcing banks to lend to people who weren't credit-worthy in the first place.
Once again, LOLAmerica.
loan balance is $11,000 it's worth maybe 7-8k
MSRP for a versa is $16,900. If he financed 100% of it for four years at 6% interest, the payment would be ~$390 a month. So maybe he got a few hundred bucks off. Or made a small down payment. Or took out a shorter term loan. Or did any number of other things that would make his payment that high. It it not hard at all to have a 300-400 car payment.
As to insurance, depends on location. When I was in Massachusetts, my insurance was 3X more expensive than it was when I was in Virginia. I went from $690 a year for two cars, to more than $2000 a year. No accidents or tickets. Just a change in the frickin state.
The attitude that fuelled this thread is a prime example of the trend towards Americans refusing to accept personal responsibility for their decisions. This has resulted ultimately in your ridiculous government enforced lending policies where people are entitled to walk away from home loans when they get underwater, which creates a vicious cycle, further forcing prices down, and is what will lead to an extended period of very poor performance in the housing market.
Not to mention the cause of the housing slump in the first place, which again is government policies forcing banks to lend to people who weren't credit-worthy in the first place.
Once again, LOLAmerica.
If more of you third world dwellers paid us back we wouldn't be so broke.
a) NZ third world? LOL more American geography fail.
b) America is a debtor to most countries, including many third world countries.
All the people telling him to sell, I thought you couldn't sell a car which had a loan on it? The title doesn't belong to you.