Very helpful. Thank you. We have Geico as well. - op |
Just in case we decided to transport, which transporter did you use? Thanks for insight. - op |
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Most recent cars (last 10 years or so) will pass California emissions since many states copied the CA requirements, and car companies found it easier to supply a single version that satisfied the emissions. So you could take a local car and have your kid drive it to California or ship it (probably about $1K). I have driven from DC to San Diego in three long days on Rte. 40 through the dessert (but it is a pain Day 1 ends in Memphis, Day 2 ends in El Paso, and Day 3 ends in San Diego).
If the out-of-state car can't pass the emissions test, then your kid would need to take it to an emissions station and have the emissions system changed (probably around $1.5-2K). As others have mentioned, a car residing in California has be registered or will be ticketed, and emissions are required for registration. |
| Lordy, after all this doom and gloom, the kid will probably be better off transferring colleges 😃 |
Thank you. op |
| I'd just say no. |
| Tell him to get a longboard or a Vespa. It's Cali, brah. |
3 days to San Diego. Wow... Your back is stronger than mine. Thanks
op |
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Yeah, I think the learning experience -- for him -- here is what's most important. Want a car? Want it badly? No reason he can't agonize about this. Fine-tune his research skills. Figure out the options himself, and present them to you.
Not saying to resist or impede his request. You just don't need to precipitate it. |
according to my emails from 2015 they were called Dependable Auto Shippers or Dasautoshippers - but when I google that now I get redirected to https://www.carsrelo.com it could be the company sold and was renamed? I don't know if they are the same outfit but it is worth running a search and asking for quotes from different companies anyway, for comps. |
I needed to (more like wanted to) have a car in California when I was in grad school in my early 20s. I bought a used car, figured out tag and license and took care of it, then made car insurance comparisons and chose the cheapest option. Finally I called Mom and Dad to let them know I got a car! |
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If you are a Costco member then I would suggest:
https://www.costcoauto.com/enterzipcode.aspx?gotourl=%2f |
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I'm in LA. I agree with your kid that he needs a car in San Diego.
First, you should buy the car in CA, because CA enacted a law that if you buy and bring a car into CA within (a year of purchase, probably) then CA will tax you on your car, CA taxes! So you'll be taxed twice. This is because taxes are so high in CA, people were buying from OOS. But the beast must be fed, so this is the state's work-around for the citizens' work-around. Second, look at autotrader.com and do a search. What you want is a three-year old vehicle with one owner and no history of damage. These are usually new vehicles that one owner leased, and the lease period ends in three years. So there are a lot of those cars on the market. I bought mine in Cerritos, which is a little over an hour south of me, and probably about 1.5 hours north of San Diego, your kid can just drive it back to his college. Third, in case you don't know what kind of car...I bought my DD a RAV4 and it is awesome--ZERO complaints and a great car. Safe (don't let him talk you into a jeep). Holds surfboards either inside, or on top. It's just a great car. Good luck, OP! What school is he going to? |
| Annual registrations are very expensive in CA also. |
| Really? Your grown son can’t figure this out? But a car from Carmax. He can research them online and schedule an appointment to test drive it. |