Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It depends what interest rate you'd get for financing and what you could do with the money you save by not paying cash.
Do you have other debt?
Do you have an emergency fund?
Have you maxed out ibonds?
What rates are you seeing for CDs or other safe investments and how do they compare to the car loan rates?
OP here. No debt (no mortgage, no car note, no student loans, etc), just revolving credit card debt that gets paid off at the end of every month.
Yes, big emergency fund.
No ibonds.
I average around 8% rate of return on my cash but it is locked up for a period of 1-2 years at a time.
Anonymous wrote:My philosophy with cars is always to get the longest possible loan. I pay it off if I want to, but I am keeping the loan on the car i bought in December 2021. It is at a 2.5% rate, so well below inflation. In a high-inflation environment, fixed-rate debt is not bad.
Anonymous wrote:It depends what interest rate you'd get for financing and what you could do with the money you save by not paying cash.
Do you have other debt?
Do you have an emergency fund?
Have you maxed out ibonds?
What rates are you seeing for CDs or other safe investments and how do they compare to the car loan rates?
Anonymous wrote:Unless you can not get 1 - 2% interest, there is not typically a financial advantage to paying cash, just a preference and the ability to say "I pay for all my cars in cash". In fact, typically dealers have better deals they can offer based on financing. You could always finance and then use your cash to pay it down as quickly as you like.