Monthly payments

Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.

steiny93

Full Access Member
Joined
Feb 17, 2021
Posts
411
Reaction score
350
I am always a little miffed when someone pontificates that there is only one correct way to own vehicles. There are many correct answers here.
total absolute truth

I've been 100% debt free and I've been in deep, both extremes are what setup the other. Money, debt, interest are nothing but tools, you just need to apply them appropriately.
 

PG01

Supporting Member
Joined
Nov 6, 2016
Posts
14,967
Reaction score
18,580
Location
Up here to the right
I hear you. We are pretty much on the same page. It is really what you are comfortable with. I am the point of life where a auto note doesn't bother me one way or the other, 10-15 years ago I was pretty concerned if I saw a big balance on auto loans.

I am always a little miffed when someone pontificates that there is only one correct way to own vehicles. There are many correct answers here.
Same.

But everyone knows everything because the saw it in the internet….
 

Mean_Green

Full Access Member
Joined
Mar 23, 2023
Posts
415
Reaction score
542
I like to buy at 5 years old for 1/2 price, get a decent low payment, then make double payments and pay it off in 2 /12 3 years
Newest car I ever bought was about 5-6 years old. Paid well under half, maybe a third of original. Paid the loan off a year or more early. Served me for close to 20 years.
 

Scott in AZ

Full Access Member
Joined
Mar 23, 2023
Posts
194
Reaction score
358
Location
Arizona
You seriously cannot expect to use an online payment ESTIMATOR and walk into various dealerships and expect the numbers to match dead nuts on.
Sure you can.

We did it on an Acura SUV for my wife earlier this year. Taxes including local, dealer fees, title, tag, destination, trash markups, added accessories (trailer hitch and ATF cooler, mats,etc) and everything. I think we probably missed the final number by less than $10, but it was $8000 lower than what one dealer said was the same exact deal.

Put your numbers in a list or an MS-Excel and ask the dealer to show you where you are off on you calculations.
 

Blueinterceptor

Full Access Member
Joined
Jan 20, 2016
Posts
982
Reaction score
553
I’d rather keep my saved money earning interest. Make the payments a little higher because I’d probably spend it somewhere anyway
 

CMoore711

Full Access Member
Joined
Jul 18, 2017
Posts
1,293
Reaction score
1,111
Sure you can.

We did it on an Acura SUV for my wife earlier this year. Taxes including local, dealer fees, title, tag, destination, trash markups, added accessories (trailer hitch and ATF cooler, mats,etc) and everything. I think we probably missed the final number by less than $10, but it was $8000 lower than what one dealer said was the same exact deal.

Put your numbers in a list or an MS-Excel and ask the dealer to show you where you are off on you calculations.

I agree that you can if you have what all those costs are.

Not everyone is making sure all those costs are accounted for in their “calculation”.
 

DuraYuk

Full Access Member
Joined
Sep 17, 2022
Posts
843
Reaction score
604
Yeah, I can't imagine the position someone needs to be in that requires them to take out a car loan on a vehicle this expensive. I would do a 36 month auto loan as long as it was 1% or lower provided I had enough cash to buy the vehicle outright in the first place.





I find that people tend to exaggerate their average gains. Bernie Madoff had an unusually consistent return of around 10% per year.
You can't exaggerate things you pay tax on because that would be stupid and counter productive. 10% gains year over year is really nothing crazy. High yield savings can almost get you there alone and that's dumb money. And the stock market isn't the only thing to invest in.

A diversified portfolio along with other assets easily surpasses 10% and you dont need to be a genius to do it. Now if you are paying people to risk your money for you then yes 10% seems unfathomable and unreachable. But for the enlightened it's really not difficult at all and doesn't need to be high risk either.
 
Last edited:

Forum statistics

Threads
132,762
Posts
1,873,781
Members
97,592
Latest member
shadowid60
Top