Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A new car.
I’ve never bought a new car. I always think that I would like one but I don’t do it.
I’m 60 and have never bought a new car either. I just don’t care about cars enough to even want a new one.
NP- Have never bought a new car, but I like nice cars. I have a Mercedes but paid 25k for it used. I treat it very well and plan to drive it forever, as I did with the previous one.
We buy new cars, but we drive them for 8-10+ years. Last one cost me $50K, sold it 13 years later for $14K. Paid $30K for another car, sold it 11 years later for 11K.
We like having new, so we don't have someone else problem (like many used cars do). And it works well if you keep cars for a long time. Financially we come out the same as someone who buys used cars---and we don't do repairs ourselves and need reliable cars for getting to jobs.
Sucker. Your hunk of metal depreciates a ton immediately after driving it off the lot. 8-10 years is also not very long to keep a car.
I agree, we could have kept them longer. But we can afford new ones easily. But it's better than most do. And I bought the one for $50K, sold it for $14K. So paid $36K over 13 years, so about $3K/year And for that I got to drive a luxury SUV that could seat 7 and haul all my kids and their friends and their equipment.
So yes, if I couldn't afford it I would keep it longer. But 10 years is still way longer than most people keep their vehicles.
NP. I've read that now the average number of years people keep their cars is over 12, due to better reliability (and cost).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Guacamole at Chipotle
Hilarious
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:$400k for an undergrad degree
I know people who are considered full pay but can’t afford it, but I have yet to meet anyone who can easily afford expensive private who just refused to pay for their kid.
Plenty of wealthy kids want the state school, but it’s not because the parent refused to pay for a private.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Guacamole at Chipotle
Ding, ding! The only correct answer.
Anonymous wrote:Guacamole at Chipotle
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't buy expensive sunglasses. They get lost or broken way too easily, especially with small kids.
I never understood this craze either. But my prescription sunglasses are pricey and I can’t do anything about that.
Once you try Maui Jims (including prescriptions) you won't go back to anything else. They are such high quality lenses and last forever (but I don't typically break mine or loose them, I'm used to having prescriptions so any sunglasses are too valuable to "loose")
It's lose, you know.
I find people like you very annoying and unlikable. And I have a graduate degree in English.
I don't really care. This is such a moronic misspelling. How do people spell the word that means the opposite of tight? Lose?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A new car.
I’ve never bought a new car. I always think that I would like one but I don’t do it.
I’m 60 and have never bought a new car either. I just don’t care about cars enough to even want a new one.
NP- Have never bought a new car, but I like nice cars. I have a Mercedes but paid 25k for it used. I treat it very well and plan to drive it forever, as I did with the previous one.
We buy new cars, but we drive them for 8-10+ years. Last one cost me $50K, sold it 13 years later for $14K. Paid $30K for another car, sold it 11 years later for 11K.
We like having new, so we don't have someone else problem (like many used cars do). And it works well if you keep cars for a long time. Financially we come out the same as someone who buys used cars---and we don't do repairs ourselves and need reliable cars for getting to jobs.
Sucker. Your hunk of metal depreciates a ton immediately after driving it off the lot. 8-10 years is also not very long to keep a car.
I agree, we could have kept them longer. But we can afford new ones easily. But it's better than most do. And I bought the one for $50K, sold it for $14K. So paid $36K over 13 years, so about $3K/year And for that I got to drive a luxury SUV that could seat 7 and haul all my kids and their friends and their equipment.
So yes, if I couldn't afford it I would keep it longer. But 10 years is still way longer than most people keep their vehicles.
Anonymous wrote:I don't buy expensive sunglasses. They get lost or broken way too easily, especially with small kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't buy expensive sunglasses. They get lost or broken way too easily, especially with small kids.
I never understood this craze either. But my prescription sunglasses are pricey and I can’t do anything about that.
Once you try Maui Jims (including prescriptions) you won't go back to anything else. They are such high quality lenses and last forever (but I don't typically break mine or loose them, I'm used to having prescriptions so any sunglasses are too valuable to "loose")
It's lose, you know.
I find people like you very annoying and unlikable. And I have a graduate degree in English.
Anonymous wrote:I'm going to go against the grain here and say that used cars are just not worth the hassle anymore. It's easier just to buy new cars so you know you won't have any anoyying issues abour the car breaking down for a while.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Luxury cars. DH and I are not car people at all. A friend was trying to convince DH to buy a 100K car and DH just kept saying "why would I get this when I can get basically the same one for $45K"
I'm not sure you can get "basically the same one" for half the price. But I wouldn't buy a 100k car either.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A car. Our HHI is about $250k, we have three kids, live in a dense neighborhood in DC and do not own a car.
It's so much easier. One less hassle, no trips to the DMV, no need to clean or get gas or find parking or get an inspection. Saves a ton of money. And we end up walking a ton which is good for the body and mind.
For the longest time I kept thinking it would get hard at some point - once we bought a house, once kid number 2 got here, once the kids got bigger - and we'd buy a car. My current one is "once a kid has a travel sport" - that would really break us. And if we need one, we'll get one, we're not absolutists. But it continues to be a delight.
Uber is the best.
PP here. We don't frequently do this. When I do, I prefer Curb (or, as a backup, Lyft) and don't even have an Uber account. I would say that I take a cab or Lyft round trip maybe once or twice a month? My husband probably similar?
We do use Zipcar probably monthly to go see friends/family who live a bit further out. And we rent a car for a weekend or week for vacation probably three times a year. Beyond that, it's walking, busses, and metro for us!
Anonymous wrote:Guacamole at Chipotle
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:$400k for an undergrad degree
I know people who are considered full pay but can’t afford it, but I have yet to meet anyone who can easily afford expensive private who just refused to pay for their kid.
Plenty of wealthy kids want the state school, but it’s not because the parent refused to pay for a private.