Anonymous wrote:It depends on why you want a classic car. Is it something you always wanted? Are you looking for something different? Are you thinking that it’s at the bottom of its depreciation curve? Insurance is cheaper for a 25+ year old car Bc you can identify it as classic and it will be dirt cheap as long as you don’t drive it everyday.
I love classic cars but they do come with compromises from a safety, maintenance, comfort, features stand point. A 90s corvette has the same build quality as a Barbie car and while it may look fun from the outside, it’s just all 90s plastic on the inside. You will have to go back to the 50-60s vetted to get something that is a true classic.
OP I had a classic car when single years ago. My insurance was $50 bucks a year. It was for pleasure driving only. But I took train to work It did have a lot of repairs. But I save so much on insurance and zero depreciation off set it
My wife has a SUV we take all road trips in. My caddie has low mileage as we take SUV on road trips and prior job was a very short commute.
Plus accident wise the Caddie is heavy, antilock brakes and airbags so at least very safe plus reliable. I don’t drive it much but did college tours in it and drive Pittsburg and Syracuse no problem.
I also like BMW maybe an older one less electronics in a convertible