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- Jul 21, 2014
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- Broken Arrow, OK
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SoonerAviator
They did not push the financing at all and, in fact, I was talking about buying it outright until fairly far into the discussion, when I thought to ask about zero-interest loans. However, I convinced myself (sort of) that they're at least not losing too much money. If inflation continues as it is today (unlikely), the final total will be only $3000 less (in today's dollars) than if I had bought it outright. So I guess it's OK from their standpoint. However, it is, of course, advantageous for me. I can absorb the payments in my monthly income. I'd have had to sell some assets to buy it outright; now I can leave those alone to grow. So I still think it makes sense.
I do want to acknowledge an important point Jeff O. made, that if I total the car before the loan is paid off, I'm still on the hook for those payments. But the psychological pain of totaling a car is true no matter what. Imagine totaling the car right after buying it; so I'm not sure planning for a crash contingency is worth it (or even possible).
You can always elect for gap coverage if you're that concerned about totaling it and not being able to cover the loan. It's usually like $2/mo on the loan payment. Or, you could just make sure your insurance coverage meets your needs if it were to be totalled.