LifeAsBen
Pre-Flight
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- Aug 1, 2016
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LifeAsBen
I'm entering the hot debate of rent vs buy with what seems to me an overlooked factor in every thing I've read: If you rent you're giving money away. If you own you have an asset to sell.
An example, say you're going to spend $20k (airplane rental only; instruction fees excluded from this example) on getting your Instrument and Commercial ratings and it will take you 5 years. If you rent you've just given away $20k. If you own you have an asset at the end of your training that you can sell. Even if ownership costs such as gas, insurance, maintenance, tie downs, etc. are $15k over 5 years you are still $5k ahead assuming the plane holds it value. Even if it loses $3-4k in value you're still ahead. If you get a mogas STC'd 150 certified ifr trainer, follow Mike Busch's maintenance advice, do all the things you can yourself, tie down at a cheap airport, you might spend a lot less than $15k over that time and come away with even more.
I'm ready, tear my assumptions apart!
An example, say you're going to spend $20k (airplane rental only; instruction fees excluded from this example) on getting your Instrument and Commercial ratings and it will take you 5 years. If you rent you've just given away $20k. If you own you have an asset at the end of your training that you can sell. Even if ownership costs such as gas, insurance, maintenance, tie downs, etc. are $15k over 5 years you are still $5k ahead assuming the plane holds it value. Even if it loses $3-4k in value you're still ahead. If you get a mogas STC'd 150 certified ifr trainer, follow Mike Busch's maintenance advice, do all the things you can yourself, tie down at a cheap airport, you might spend a lot less than $15k over that time and come away with even more.
I'm ready, tear my assumptions apart!