Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Usually certified check from bank.
Funny: when we bought our last car, I also expected needing a certified check, but they were like: regular check is fine. If it bounces, we know where you live. (<- car dealer sense of humor.)
Anonymous wrote:Usually certified check from bank.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Usually certified check from bank.
Why? Why not just cut a regular check? That’s all we’ve had to do to pay for cars that cost between $55k and $75k. Is there something I’m missing?
A personal check could bounce. A certified check carries a guarantee from the bank that the funds are available and set aside to cover this specific transaction.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Although we can pay cash, we take out the longest loan available, put both our names on the installment contract, put down a large down payment to make the monthly payment roughly $250. With our house paid off, it's nice to keep some type of credit ongoing in our name.
Don’t you have a credit card? That’s enough. Why pay extra on a car when you don’t need to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Although we can pay cash, we take out the longest loan available, put both our names on the installment contract, put down a large down payment to make the monthly payment roughly $250. With our house paid off, it's nice to keep some type of credit ongoing in our name.
Don’t you have a credit card? That’s enough. Why pay extra on a car when you don’t need to.
You need to brush up on how credit scores are calculated.
Credit cards are less valuable debt and fixed term loans are more valuable debt that raises your score.
Not having a mortgage isn't a smart way to raise acredit score. Mortgages are cheaper than car loans.
But regardless, someone wo paid off a house is extremely unlikely to have credit costs impacted by a car loan.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Usually certified check from bank.
Why? Why not just cut a regular check? That’s all we’ve had to do to pay for cars that cost between $55k and $75k. Is there something I’m missing?
Until about 4-5 years ago, you had to do certified checks. Now dealers have a way to verify the funds so regular checks work. Without verifying, they are not trusting you have $50K+ in funds and giving you the car
That is not true.
Car dealers have no issues accepting large personal checks. This is not new.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Usually certified check from bank.
Why? Why not just cut a regular check? That’s all we’ve had to do to pay for cars that cost between $55k and $75k. Is there something I’m missing?
Until about 4-5 years ago, you had to do certified checks. Now dealers have a way to verify the funds so regular checks work. Without verifying, they are not trusting you have $50K+ in funds and giving you the car
That is not true.
Car dealers have no issues accepting large personal checks. This is not new.
Anonymous wrote:Although we can pay cash, we take out the longest loan available, put both our names on the installment contract, put down a large down payment to make the monthly payment roughly $250. With our house paid off, it's nice to keep some type of credit ongoing in our name.
Anonymous wrote:I gave them a couple thousand in cash and wired the rest. They wanted the cash in order to let me take the car before my wire cleared.
Don’t come at me- I’m not wealthy or out of touch but I’ve never financed a car. When we couldn’t afford nice cars, we just paid cash for what we could afford. You pay so much more over the life of a car when you finance it. Insurance costs a lot more too. I know neither set of parents financed cars either. IMO house mortgage should be your only debt.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Although we can pay cash, we take out the longest loan available, put both our names on the installment contract, put down a large down payment to make the monthly payment roughly $250. With our house paid off, it's nice to keep some type of credit ongoing in our name.
Don’t you have a credit card? That’s enough. Why pay extra on a car when you don’t need to.
You need to brush up on how credit scores are calculated.
Credit cards are less valuable debt and fixed term loans are more valuable debt that raises your score.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Although we can pay cash, we take out the longest loan available, put both our names on the installment contract, put down a large down payment to make the monthly payment roughly $250. With our house paid off, it's nice to keep some type of credit ongoing in our name.
Don’t you have a credit card? That’s enough. Why pay extra on a car when you don’t need to.
Anonymous wrote:Although we can pay cash, we take out the longest loan available, put both our names on the installment contract, put down a large down payment to make the monthly payment roughly $250. With our house paid off, it's nice to keep some type of credit ongoing in our name.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Usually certified check from bank.
Why? Why not just cut a regular check? That’s all we’ve had to do to pay for cars that cost between $55k and $75k. Is there something I’m missing?
Until about 4-5 years ago, you had to do certified checks. Now dealers have a way to verify the funds so regular checks work. Without verifying, they are not trusting you have $50K+ in funds and giving you the car