Anonymous wrote:Leasing is the less risky option because your total car costs (besides gas) are fixed at $10k, while the used car could potentially cost more in repairs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Buy new. Better value & safer vehicle.
Thank you for your advice from the land of privilege. I can afford $10K. I can’t afford new.
If you have $10,000, you can buy a new car. Consider a Honda Civic with little or no money down. Use the $10,000--or the remainder--to make monthly payments for three years, then continue payments with earnings or sell it.
Any used car selling for $10,000 or less in this market is going to cost you a lot of money for repairs.
You really don’t get it, so you.
NP but PP makes a solid point. I wouldn’t even sell new car. I’d lease in OP’s position.
$300 lease for 3 years is $10,000 (or $200 lease after $3kdown). You have a brand new, safe car, that you never have to worry about maintenance or repair for. A $10k car now won’t be worth anything in 3 years and even if it is, it will likely be more worth less than what you spent on repairs or maintenance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Buy new. Better value & safer vehicle.
Thank you for your advice from the land of privilege. I can afford $10K. I can’t afford new.
If you have $10,000, you can buy a new car. Consider a Honda Civic with little or no money down. Use the $10,000--or the remainder--to make monthly payments for three years, then continue payments with earnings or sell it.
Any used car selling for $10,000 or less in this market is going to cost you a lot of money for repairs.
You really don’t get it, so you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Buy new. Better value & safer vehicle.
Thank you for your advice from the land of privilege. I can afford $10K. I can’t afford new.
If you have $10,000, you can buy a new car. Consider a Honda Civic with little or no money down. Use the $10,000--or the remainder--to make monthly payments for three years, then continue payments with earnings or sell it.
Any used car selling for $10,000 or less in this market is going to cost you a lot of money for repairs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:volvo
when the kids were little and I was in grad school, I did this and volvos were great and I had a great Volvo mechanic (who has since retired sadly). Any suggestions about makes/models that are good used?
Anonymous wrote:volvo
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Buy new. Better value & safer vehicle.
Thank you for your advice from the land of privilege. I can afford $10K. I can’t afford new.
Anonymous wrote:Buy new. Better value & safer vehicle.
Anonymous wrote:Buy new. Better value & safer vehicle.
Anonymous wrote:I'd be worried about airbag functionality.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I might look at EVs— you can probably find a relatively newish spark or leaf— will have range of less than 100 miles but how much does he need? Fuel and maintenance will be a lot cheaper and it’ll probably be more fun to drive.
you will never find an EV for 10000 that is reliable. maybe 30000
this just isn't true. EVs have almost no moving parts so they are much more reliable and cheaper to own as they age. The only downside is the battery can lose some range. It's not hard to find a used EV that had a smaller range when new, and has a smaller range now, under 10k. It might not be practical for a kid who goes to school several hundred miles away but reliability won't be the problem.
It's like when people worry about range dropping in traffic-- EVs are fundamentally different and range increases in traffic.
I really appreciate the PPs posting about EVs, and I would love to own one, but I don’t think this is very practical in my situation since DS goes to school a 4-6 hour drive away depending on traffic and weather conditions.