Anonymous wrote:Get her a used volvo that gets passed to her younger sibking when she goes to college.
If she manages to pay for college through scholarships and graduwtes debt free, offer her the choice between the new loaded jeep or grad school paid for in full.
Hopefully by then she will have learned enough to make a sensible choice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. Teens will take better care of things they have to buy themselves. I can absolutely afford to buy my kids cars. But I let them know they would absolutely have to save up and buy their own first cars.
I also would never spend $40k on a new car. I would also never buy a teenager a new car.
+1
I don't think her stats and dating history are relevant, either.
Anonymous wrote:A good friend of mine in high school got a new jeep when she turned 16. Great kid, good grades, athletic, etc. Didn't take a year for her to skid off the road into a ditch and flip the car. Thankfully, she was ok (car was totaled). I believe her next car was more modest.
And since that was nearly 30 years ago, I can tell you that she graduated college, got a good job, and then started her own business. Married a nice guy, has a lovely family. While the new Jeep seemed extravagant at the time, it didn't cause her to become some kind of entitled, spoiled jerk.

Anonymous wrote:Yes. Teens will take better care of things they have to buy themselves. I can absolutely afford to buy my kids cars. But I let them know they would absolutely have to save up and buy their own first cars.
I also would never spend $40k on a new car. I would also never buy a teenager a new car.
Anonymous wrote:Our daughter really wants a loaded Jeep for her upcoming birthday, which is about $40,000. She's an all A student, co-captain of her athletic team, elected to student government, volunteers, works part-time after volunteer opportunity offered her a weekend job, dating a sweet boy at St Albans.