Donnation
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- Dec 16, 2018
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Uber and Door Dash!
Medical Sales Rep.
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Uber and Door Dash!
30k miles in less than a year, wow
Check the financing. Is it same payment but stretched out longer? Interest rates are surely higher now than they were when you bought your 2021.
If it is truly he is giving you trade in value on your 21 = selling price of the 22 + dealer fees so the net deal after trade is $0, and all you are doing is transferring the balance owed on the 21 to the 22, then yes, you are buying 29970 miles for zero dollars. But, unless you see the total purchase price less trade = $0, you are not winning.
You are trading a unique super sharp vehicle for a "Plain Jane"....Nah, I'd keep it. I've been offered 100K for mine. Told them, sorry, but it's too hard to duplicate....
It may or may not be a horrible deal. My suggestion is, get the payment out of the picture. Here is the math you need:Yeah, I was thinking the same. I could wrap the Yukon as well, but that would come with an additional expense that I really don't want to take on. I guess I was more excited about it because I've always been a Yukon guy and while I love the Tahoe, a 2022 Yukon seemed like an awesome swap.
Thanks so much for this great advice.It may or may not be a horrible deal. My suggestion is, get the payment out of the picture. Here is the math you need:
Purchase Price of New Yukon = P
Trade in Value of your Taho = T
Payoff on 2021 Tahoe = Z
Dealer Fees = D
Taxes = t
Title, License, Transfer Fees = L
Your Real Cost, C is defined by
C = P - (T - Z) + D + t + L
Then, since you are financing, you need to consider:
Annual Interest Rate converted to a decimal = r (ie: 4% = 0.04)
Number of months = n
Total Interest you will pay = I
For a 4 year loan, you can calculate the total interest you will pay from this formula:
I = C * [(1 + r/n)^n – 1]
Or an easier way is use an online loan calculator --> https://www.calculator.net/auto-loan-calculator.html
Add I to C to see the real cost of the deal. If you want to see the delta cost between sticking w/ your current vehicle and now, you would need to determine the remaining interest you have to pay on the current vehicle...but, what is going to get you is that on a 4 year loan, about half of the total interest expense comes in the first year..so you are basically resetting into the high interest part of the loan, and I am almost positive that you will be paying a higher interest rate originating a loan now that you were in 2021.
One wild card could be that GM was offering 0% for 36 months...if you could sneak in to this financing, you would actually save money on interest vs. what you were at.