Anonymous wrote:Okay where are you guys finding all these fantastic used cars that last forever? Please help a fella here. I bought a used 2020 Corolla 2 years ago and it's been issues after issues. I don't have any skills to fix cars. My mechanic is reasonable in cost. Maybe I am unlucky, but it has not been cheap owning this car.
Next time, how do I find a good used car? I bought mine from a Toyota dealership as a certified pre owned. Unfortunately within a year of ownership everything started unraveling. And forget about the extra warranty they sell you. It's a scam because suddenly everything is "wear and tear" so not covered.
I'll just find the cheapest new car I can find next time and save myself some headache
Anonymous wrote:Americans spend way more on cars than they think. It’s been this way for a very long time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:yup....avg price of new car this year at $50K. If you live in Fairfax County, you will pay 6% car tax, the crazy insurance rates, etc which essentially has made new car purchases for the wealth. No different now vs homes, and other high price items where MC "realistic and best value" route is purchasing a used car. Hoping EVs will lower new car price, but EV prices likely contributing to the inflation here.
Every EV is priced higher than it's gas powered equivalent. You may save on the operational and maintenance costs, but the up front costs of EVs are clearly higher.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is worse in my opinion is the normalization of $500+/month car payment. I don't care how much you make a month, $500/month just for the car note is wild.
Not nearly as wild as $1000/mo car insurance.
who pays $12K/year for car insurance for one car?!?!?!
For a family! Don’t be a dunce
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:yup....avg price of new car this year at $50K. If you live in Fairfax County, you will pay 6% car tax, the crazy insurance rates, etc which essentially has made new car purchases for the wealth. No different now vs homes, and other high price items where MC "realistic and best value" route is purchasing a used car. Hoping EVs will lower new car price, but EV prices likely contributing to the inflation here.
Every EV is priced higher than it's gas powered equivalent. You may save on the operational and maintenance costs, but the up front costs of EVs are clearly higher.
A Prius and a Camry cost the same up front. But you have to keep putting money in the Camry to drive it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:yup....avg price of new car this year at $50K. If you live in Fairfax County, you will pay 6% car tax, the crazy insurance rates, etc which essentially has made new car purchases for the wealth. No different now vs homes, and other high price items where MC "realistic and best value" route is purchasing a used car. Hoping EVs will lower new car price, but EV prices likely contributing to the inflation here.
Every EV is priced higher than it's gas powered equivalent. You may save on the operational and maintenance costs, but the up front costs of EVs are clearly higher.
A Prius and a Camry cost the same up front. But you have to keep putting money in the Camry to drive it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:yup....avg price of new car this year at $50K. If you live in Fairfax County, you will pay 6% car tax, the crazy insurance rates, etc which essentially has made new car purchases for the wealth. No different now vs homes, and other high price items where MC "realistic and best value" route is purchasing a used car. Hoping EVs will lower new car price, but EV prices likely contributing to the inflation here.
Every EV is priced higher than it's gas powered equivalent. You may save on the operational and maintenance costs, but the up front costs of EVs are clearly higher.
No it is not dumb to have liability only insurance given you have the savings to replace the car with cash if it is totaled. The expected value of your insurance claims (on average) must be less than your premiums in order for the insurance company to make money. So it’s better to self insure if you can afford it.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cars are really not that expensive if you don’t borrow money to buy one you can’t afford. My two cars only cost around $1,000 per month combined, including maintenance, taxes, liability only insurance, and fuel. Save money to buy it in cash and don’t take loans for cars.
it's rather dumb to have liability only insurance if the car is worth $20K+ still
But yes, pay cash or work towards that. And never take a car loan for more than 3-4 years. You cannot afford the car if you can't do it that way