Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: In 2005, I bought a 5 year old Camry for 8500. I've had it for 11+!years, and my repairs have been a battery, tires, brakes, and a timing belt. probably something I'm forgetting.
So let's say I'm in for $12.5k and I can sell it for $1.5k. That's $1000 a year I've paid. You guys are spending at least $3600/year leasing, plus whatever your down payment was. Over 11 years that's $40,000+ to my $11k.
Just buy a used Toyota or Honda sedan for under $15k and drive it until it's so old you're embarrassed to be seen in it.
You can't really compare the two when you are driving a junker, and they are driving new cars every 3 years.
[b]Do you think someone who can't afford a $500 monthly payment should be driving new cars every three years? I didn't see the part where OP mentioned she was flush with cash and was too good to drive an older vehicle.
Op here. We can afford a $500 payment. We make close to 400-450k with no debt except a mortgage. I would like to avoid driving an older vehicle (unless it's our curent one) because I don't want to deal with the hassle or cost of repairs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: In 2005, I bought a 5 year old Camry for 8500. I've had it for 11+!years, and my repairs have been a battery, tires, brakes, and a timing belt. probably something I'm forgetting.
So let's say I'm in for $12.5k and I can sell it for $1.5k. That's $1000 a year I've paid. You guys are spending at least $3600/year leasing, plus whatever your down payment was. Over 11 years that's $40,000+ to my $11k.
Just buy a used Toyota or Honda sedan for under $15k and drive it until it's so old you're embarrassed to be seen in it.
You can't really compare the two when you are driving a junker, and they are driving new cars every 3 years.
This is true. The Camry analogy was a bad one. Of course anyone can save money driving a 5 year old car for 11 years. Doesn't take a genius to figure out that one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: In 2005, I bought a 5 year old Camry for 8500. I've had it for 11+!years, and my repairs have been a battery, tires, brakes, and a timing belt. probably something I'm forgetting.
So let's say I'm in for $12.5k and I can sell it for $1.5k. That's $1000 a year I've paid. You guys are spending at least $3600/year leasing, plus whatever your down payment was. Over 11 years that's $40,000+ to my $11k.
Just buy a used Toyota or Honda sedan for under $15k and drive it until it's so old you're embarrassed to be seen in it.
You can't really compare the two when you are driving a junker, and they are driving new cars every 3 years.
[b]Do you think someone who can't afford a $500 monthly payment should be driving new cars every three years? I didn't see the part where OP mentioned she was flush with cash and was too good to drive an older vehicle.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: In 2005, I bought a 5 year old Camry for 8500. I've had it for 11+!years, and my repairs have been a battery, tires, brakes, and a timing belt. probably something I'm forgetting.
So let's say I'm in for $12.5k and I can sell it for $1.5k. That's $1000 a year I've paid. You guys are spending at least $3600/year leasing, plus whatever your down payment was. Over 11 years that's $40,000+ to my $11k.
Just buy a used Toyota or Honda sedan for under $15k and drive it until it's so old you're embarrassed to be seen in it.
You can't really compare the two when you are driving a junker, and they are driving new cars every 3 years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are also debating leasing vs buying. We own our car outright and the dealership said we should expect 2-3k a year in repair costs.
We could lease a new 3 series for 3k down and 300 a month. So for around 1,500 more a year we could drive a new car and not face any repairs or maintenance costs.
I understand how some think buying is better financially but at the end of the day it seems both options suck. When you buy you're investing in a depreciating object. You face repairs on a car, especially the older it is. When you lease you're just renting a car but avoiding the maintenance costs.
I'm at a loss as to what to do.
What year is your Ferrari? Seriously, what normal car has 2-3k a year in expenses, that dealer is fleecing you. I have an older BMW and even that doesn't go past $1200 a year on its worst years.
A bmw. We had 2k in repairs last year alone. We've had it taken to different shops too. It's not like we only went to one dealer.
When I had a Mercedes SUV, I paid way more than $2k a year on repairs and maintenance. Easily paid double, or triple on a bad year. I now have a Japanese car that's much cheaper to maintain, but not as nice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:paid $20 k for certified SUV...2 years old....100k mile warranty[/quote
American or Korean?
Toyota
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are also debating leasing vs buying. We own our car outright and the dealership said we should expect 2-3k a year in repair costs.
We could lease a new 3 series for 3k down and 300 a month. So for around 1,500 more a year we could drive a new car and not face any repairs or maintenance costs.
I understand how some think buying is better financially but at the end of the day it seems both options suck. When you buy you're investing in a depreciating object. You face repairs on a car, especially the older it is. When you lease you're just renting a car but avoiding the maintenance costs.
I'm at a loss as to what to do.
What year is your Ferrari? Seriously, what normal car has 2-3k a year in expenses, that dealer is fleecing you. I have an older BMW and even that doesn't go past $1200 a year on its worst years.
A bmw. We had 2k in repairs last year alone. We've had it taken to different shops too. It's not like we only went to one dealer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: In 2005, I bought a 5 year old Camry for 8500. I've had it for 11+!years, and my repairs have been a battery, tires, brakes, and a timing belt. probably something I'm forgetting.
So let's say I'm in for $12.5k and I can sell it for $1.5k. That's $1000 a year I've paid. You guys are spending at least $3600/year leasing, plus whatever your down payment was. Over 11 years that's $40,000+ to my $11k.
Just buy a used Toyota or Honda sedan for under $15k and drive it until it's so old you're embarrassed to be seen in it.
You can't really compare the two when you are driving a junker, and they are driving new cars every 3 years.
Anonymous wrote: In 2005, I bought a 5 year old Camry for 8500. I've had it for 11+!years, and my repairs have been a battery, tires, brakes, and a timing belt. probably something I'm forgetting.
So let's say I'm in for $12.5k and I can sell it for $1.5k. That's $1000 a year I've paid. You guys are spending at least $3600/year leasing, plus whatever your down payment was. Over 11 years that's $40,000+ to my $11k.
Just buy a used Toyota or Honda sedan for under $15k and drive it until it's so old you're embarrassed to be seen in it.
Anonymous wrote:paid $20 k for certified SUV...2 years old....100k mile warranty[/quote
American or Korean?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are also debating leasing vs buying. We own our car outright and the dealership said we should expect 2-3k a year in repair costs.
We could lease a new 3 series for 3k down and 300 a month. So for around 1,500 more a year we could drive a new car and not face any repairs or maintenance costs.
I understand how some think buying is better financially but at the end of the day it seems both options suck. When you buy you're investing in a depreciating object. You face repairs on a car, especially the older it is. When you lease you're just renting a car but avoiding the maintenance costs.
I'm at a loss as to what to do.
What year is your Ferrari? Seriously, what normal car has 2-3k a year in expenses, that dealer is fleecing you. I have an older BMW and even that doesn't go past $1200 a year on its worst years.
+1. Seems like the sales guy did a great job of convincing people that leasing is better because of "repair cost" of owning a car. but I guess they also fail to talk about the MANY years of no car payments (few maintenance bills) which is still better financially than a living with a car note for the rest of your life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are also debating leasing vs buying. We own our car outright and the dealership said we should expect 2-3k a year in repair costs.
We could lease a new 3 series for 3k down and 300 a month. So for around 1,500 more a year we could drive a new car and not face any repairs or maintenance costs.
I understand how some think buying is better financially but at the end of the day it seems both options suck. When you buy you're investing in a depreciating object. You face repairs on a car, especially the older it is. When you lease you're just renting a car but avoiding the maintenance costs.
I'm at a loss as to what to do.
What year is your Ferrari? Seriously, what normal car has 2-3k a year in expenses, that dealer is fleecing you. I have an older BMW and even that doesn't go past $1200 a year on its worst years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:paid $20 k for certified SUV...2 years old....100k mile warranty
Where?
We got a certified 2013 Honda CRV EX-L AWD w/ Nav in March 2015 (so driven 3 years before we bought it) for $20K. Financed through Maryland State Employees Credit Union for 1.9% and our monthly payment is around $300/month for 5 years. Planning to drive it at least 3 years after we're done paying it off.
I'd want a bigger car if I had more than 1 kid, though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are also debating leasing vs buying. We own our car outright and the dealership said we should expect 2-3k a year in repair costs.
We could lease a new 3 series for 3k down and 300 a month. So for around 1,500 more a year we could drive a new car and not face any repairs or maintenance costs.
I understand how some think buying is better financially but at the end of the day it seems both options suck. When you buy you're investing in a depreciating object. You face repairs on a car, especially the older it is. When you lease you're just renting a car but avoiding the maintenance costs.
I'm at a loss as to what to do.
What year is your Ferrari? Seriously, what normal car has 2-3k a year in expenses, that dealer is fleecing you. I have an older BMW and even that doesn't go past $1200 a year on its worst years.