| I don't think the OP knows what a "car person" is. |
| I'd rather buy 80k land than an 80k car. Unless my non 401k account had at least 1m. |
| We have a bmw and tesla in our driveway. We say we're not car people because we walk everywhere. The cars are always at home when we're out and about. |
My non-401k account has over a million. I've got a new CR-V.
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It means they’re not car enthusiasts who go on about cylinders and acceleration and whatnot.
They just want something that gets them from A to B in varying degrees of looks and comfort. For me that’s an old battered Japanese car. I couldn’t care less about looks, but it has to be reliable, not expensive and have good visibility at the back. Battered is good, because then people leave me alone on the road
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| Where do people buy and get serviced the likes of lamborghinis in areas where $400k is the top home value? I’d love to know which Lamborghini and Land Rover dealerships or private auto service stations are investing capital and in technicians to serve these car owners in lower home value areas. |
Just trying to downplay how pretentious and status-craving they are. Totally performative. |
Live like a miser in your prime so some Wall Street owned retirement community run by $10/hour thugs can loot it all. Or your kids can inherit it so THEY can blow it on nice cars, trips and a more lavish house. lol |
Bingo. I'd add Tesla to that list. |
| We have one car, a Subaru Outback like everyone else in our neighborhood. Before that we had my husband's college Honda. I haven't owned my own car since 2007. I sold it after living in DC for two years. I hate driving and I mainly see a car for transporting me and my family where I need to go and get the safest one I can afford. |
To be fair, a million dollar neighborhood in DC isn't exactly novel or particularly wealthy. |
+1 That's what we have. And we did spend more to live nearer to the Metro so we could use the car less often anyway. |
That's because you live in a DCUM bubble. Statistically, for the USA, that's wealthy. |
You're thinking of this all wrong. When you can get everything you need, like 4500 sf and a nice yard, for $400k, you have a lot of money left over for exotic cars. When you're scraping by to pay a seven figure mortgage on some shit shack in Bethesda "because of the schools!!!" you have a 10-year-old Subaru and say you're not a car person. |
Probably, but significantly less than we would have paid for it new. We also have an Outback, and before we had kids we had a 10yo WRX. These cars work for our current needs and are easy to own. That's what I mean by not being a car person. They are good at schlepping us, our kids, and our stuff around the city and occasionally to places a few hours away. |