Anonymous wrote:It depends on the brand. If it's Mercedes or BMW, get rid of it way before 100k miles. For Honda, Toyota or their luxury brands, Lexus and Acura, 100k miles is nothing.
Anonymous wrote:I have 2 cars, One is 21 years old with 300,000 miles and the other is 30 years old with 740,000 miles, Both are fairly reliable.
Anonymous wrote:Driving my 2012 GMC Acadia to wheels fall off. With kids at college I used it for drop off and pick ups. Since 2020 made 12 trips to Boston and 15 trips to NY. I still drive it on 12 hour round trips.
Anonymous wrote:We keep it until it dies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't, but I don't like to keep cars out of warranty.
OMG
I know. that sounds really dumb and wasteful.
Why is it dumb? The money is not relevant, and I like to know that the car I'm in has the most up to date safety features and if it breaks down on me, I get it to the dealer and they will cover everything and give me a loaner.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't, but I don't like to keep cars out of warranty.
OMG
I know. that sounds really dumb and wasteful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I drive my car until it costs more to fix it than it is worth. No matter how many miles are on it. My car is 7 years old but does not have 100k on it. DH’s car is 17 years old and has over 100k.
A reliable used car is, in my mind, worth a lot more to me than the blue book value.
But I’m not a fancy car person even though I could probably afford one; so ymmv.
The bolded above is our approach, too. One of our cars is 9 years old with over 150k miles (DH drives a lot for work), that so far hasn’t given us any major issues. We stay on top of maintenance, which is still much cheaper than a car payment.