Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, UMC parents buy their kids a car during HS.
+1
And it’s a nice new car too!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, UMC parents buy their kids a car during HS.
If your kid goes to say Yale or Notre Dame or NYU and doesn’t drive at college, you’re going to keep their old car in the garage? No. You’re going to unload it. So they’ll need another car when they graduate.
Most people absolutely do not do this. They keep the car at their parents house or find somewhere to park it off campus. Selling a car because someone going to school is something a poor people do. Most kids going to schools like this come from families that can afford to spend a few hundred a month on a car no one is using.
Ridiculous. What the hecknis my kid going to with a 6 year old car after college?!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, UMC parents buy their kids a car during HS.
If your kid goes to say Yale or Notre Dame or NYU and doesn’t drive at college, you’re going to keep their old car in the garage? No. You’re going to unload it. So they’ll need another car when they graduate.
Most people absolutely do not do this. They keep the car at their parents house or find somewhere to park it off campus. Selling a car because someone going to school is something a poor people do. Most kids going to schools like this come from families that can afford to spend a few hundred a month on a car no one is using.
Poor people keep cars in the driveway for five to six years. Rich don’t even own daily driver cars that old. You do not know what you’re talking about. A prissy rich girl isn’t driving her high school Audi or Jeep after she graduates from college. She’s going to ask for a new one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, UMC parents buy their kids a car during HS.
If your kid goes to say Yale or Notre Dame or NYU and doesn’t drive at college, you’re going to keep their old car in the garage? No. You’re going to unload it. So they’ll need another car when they graduate.
Most people absolutely do not do this. They keep the car at their parents house or find somewhere to park it off campus. Selling a car because someone going to school is something a poor people do. Most kids going to schools like this come from families that can afford to spend a few hundred a month on a car no one is using.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, UMC parents buy their kids a car during HS.
If your kid goes to say Yale or Notre Dame or NYU and doesn’t drive at college, you’re going to keep their old car in the garage? No. You’re going to unload it. So they’ll need another car when they graduate.
Most people absolutely do not do this. They keep the car at their parents house or find somewhere to park it off campus. Selling a car because someone going to school is something a poor people do. Most kids going to schools like this come from families that can afford to spend a few hundred a month on a car no one is using.
Ridiculous. What the hecknis my kid going to with a 6 year old car after college?!
Anonymous wrote:
How do people like this get to be UMC? I guess you can make big money without having much common sense or ability to think for yourself.
sour grapes.Anonymous wrote:I was given a basic used car with no tape deck. I was thrilled. It was not an expectation. Lots of friends had to buy their own cars.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, UMC parents buy their kids a car during HS.
If your kid goes to say Yale or Notre Dame or NYU and doesn’t drive at college, you’re going to keep their old car in the garage? No. You’re going to unload it. So they’ll need another car when they graduate.
Most people absolutely do not do this. They keep the car at their parents house or find somewhere to park it off campus. Selling a car because someone going to school is something a poor people do. Most kids going to schools like this come from families that can afford to spend a few hundred a month on a car no one is using.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A car is 20k used. It doesn't shock me people would buy their kids cars, at all. It's a small expense for someone UMC. People pay 80k/year for college, buy whole homes, pay for a down payment...Having a dependable car is important based on where you live.
Avg new car sale is $47k (!!!) at the moment. And used comes with risks like maintenance, lack of free loaner car if in for service. Even things like worrying about tires and brakes on a used car is a chore and a safety risk.
Very decent/safe cars can be had for $27K. Your figure probably includes SUVs and hybrids, which are not needed for a first car.
Used cars are risky, full of unknowns, and not exactly the steal they used to be. If you’re a responsible college grad with good credit and a nice job, get a practical new car. 2-3 years of 100% worry free transportation is worth a premium.
The bigger stresser and ding to my self esteem when I was a young college grad was my piece of junk car. Buy your kid decent wheels if you can afford to help.
DP. You lose a few grand the second you drive off the lot with a new car. You can buy certified used cars at this point so there's zero reason to buy new. You can look up vins for accident history. They are leas risky purchases than they used to be when you bought used by scanning classified ads in the newspaper (how I got my first car)
Anonymous wrote:Almost everyone I know at my high school was given a car by their parents when they got their drivers license. This is the norm among upper middle class and above households. These parents want their kids to focus on grades in school and don’t want a minimum wage job (during the school year) to jeopardize their chances of getting into a good college.