Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Never.
‘Tis a shame because some of them really are quite fun to drive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just curious.
Wrong forum for your question. People in this forum hate cars. They drive the cheapest Toyotas and Hondas to the ground.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’d do it now at 500k, just not a car person.
What would the payment be in something like that? 1.3k/mo with some money down? That’s just noise.
After all my deductions, including 2 401k, health, HSA I’m bringing in nearly 25k/mo. I’m not gonna miss 1300.
If you need to do it on credit, you shouldn't be buying it. Seriously, I haven't had a car loan for 20 years. And don't give me any BS about your money working for you. The last 6 months have proved that's not the case.
I always buy my cars with a 0 or low interest rate loan. Has nothing to do I do with needing to take out a loan. Please don’t tell me I have spell out the why to you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’d do it now at 500k, just not a car person.
What would the payment be in something like that? 1.3k/mo with some money down? That’s just noise.
After all my deductions, including 2 401k, health, HSA I’m bringing in nearly 25k/mo. I’m not gonna miss 1300.
If you need to do it on credit, you shouldn't be buying it. Seriously, I haven't had a car loan for 20 years. And don't give me any BS about your money working for you. The last 6 months have proved that's not the case.
Anonymous wrote:As expected, you’re getting a lot of answers from people who don’t like cars, can’t imagine that anyone else could, and want to judge people who do. Whatever. Driving a crappy old car to your house with the Subzero refrigerator and Wolf range doesn’t make you morally superior.
As someone who likes cars, I don’t think the answer is tied to income, so much as when you have sufficient funds to pay your mortgage, other expenses, retirement and college savings, and have enough left over to pay cash for the car. (Note: you don’t have to actually pay cash — dealers often have special deals for financing that make it make financial sense to do so. You just should be able to pay cash, if needed.) if having a nice car is a priority for you, that number will be different from those who prioritize other things.
Anonymous wrote:Never.
Anonymous wrote:As expected, you’re getting a lot of answers from people who don’t like cars, can’t imagine that anyone else could, and want to judge people who do. Whatever. Driving a crappy old car to your house with the Subzero refrigerator and Wolf range doesn’t make you morally superior.
As someone who likes cars, I don’t think the answer is tied to income, so much as when you have sufficient funds to pay your mortgage, other expenses, retirement and college savings, and have enough left over to pay cash for the car. (Note: you don’t have to actually pay cash — dealers often have special deals for financing that make it make financial sense to do so. You just should be able to pay cash, if needed.) if having a nice car is a priority for you, that number will be different from those who prioritize other things.
Anonymous wrote:Just curious.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’d do it now at 500k, just not a car person.
What would the payment be in something like that? 1.3k/mo with some money down? That’s just noise.
After all my deductions, including 2 401k, health, HSA I’m bringing in nearly 25k/mo. I’m not gonna miss 1300.
If you need to do it on credit, you shouldn't be buying it. Seriously, I haven't had a car loan for 20 years. And don't give me any BS about your money working for you. The last 6 months have proved that's not the case.