Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another who has a Range Rover that's rarely in the shop. Seems like a rumor for those who can't afford, TBH.
This. I’ve had 5 range rovers over the years and the only major problem I’ve ever had was the gas tank on the very first year sport wouldn’t stop filling.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you can pay cash, I guess so. If you have to finance, no. Kids are expensive. Very expensive.
This is such dumb advice. As has been said many times over on these car posts, financing is cheaper than paying cash if your return on investments > interest rate on debt
NP
DO you finance your grocery bill too?
+1
Poor people talk
Always use cash when you can. ALWAYS.
I am the PP who said that was dumb advice. I make 400k and I am also a finance professor.
LOL. ok.
No, I really am. You and the prior PP arguing that financing a car is bad subscribe to what I usually refer to as "redneck finance" mentality. It's the Dave Ramsay school of advice for poor people who think buying things on credit is bad, mostly because they don't understand simple finance concepts and can't manage their own money responsibility. Debt = high interest rates and default risk to those people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At your age you should be building the biggest FU fund you can, not feeding your car guy ego. You should be saving everything you can pre-baby. What if your wife decides to stay home to care for the baby and your income takes a hit. You should be doing everything you can to set things up so that if that is what she decides you can say we can afford it.
This is so spot on! Just because you can afford it doesn’t mean it’s the right thing to do. A big FU fund gives you options down the road for so many things.
Anonymous wrote:At your age you should be building the biggest FU fund you can, not feeding your car guy ego. You should be saving everything you can pre-baby. What if your wife decides to stay home to care for the baby and your income takes a hit. You should be doing everything you can to set things up so that if that is what she decides you can say we can afford it.
Anonymous wrote:Another who has a Range Rover that's rarely in the shop. Seems like a rumor for those who can't afford, TBH.
Anonymous wrote:At your age you should be building the biggest FU fund you can, not feeding your car guy ego. You should be saving everything you can pre-baby. What if your wife decides to stay home to care for the baby and your income takes a hit. You should be doing everything you can to set things up so that if that is what she decides you can say we can afford it.
Anonymous wrote:I would wait to have the kid(s) first. You don’t know if you will need fertility help. You don’t know if your wife won’t want to go back to work. Kids are expensive. You may want to move to a different neighborhood. I would not splurge on the car first.
DH is a car person and has a Range Rover and a Porsche. He didn’t get the Porsche until kid 2 was 2yo.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you can pay cash, I guess so. If you have to finance, no. Kids are expensive. Very expensive.
This is such dumb advice. As has been said many times over on these car posts, financing is cheaper than paying cash if your return on investments > interest rate on debt
NP
DO you finance your grocery bill too?
+1
Poor people talk
Always use cash when you can. ALWAYS.
I am the PP who said that was dumb advice. I make 400k and I am also a finance professor.
LOL. ok.
Anonymous wrote:As a 33 year old with 2 kids and an income of $435 I would say no if you are planning to have a nanny and are going to be shelling out for an expensive preschool. The nanny, the classes, the childbirth costs (just hope your wife doesn't have complications and has generous mat leave), the preschool tuition... Save your $$
Anonymous wrote:It's a question of priorities. Our HHI is a good bit higher and I am sure we are older, but I don't own cars in that price range.