flhrci
Final Approach
So, when you are wanting to trade or just get another car/truck/whatever, are you going to buy (finance), buy (cash), lease, or sell your children to pay for it?
David
David
So, when you are wanting to trade or just get another car/truck/whatever, are you going to buy (finance), buy (cash), lease, or sell your children to pay for it?
David
When I was in my 20s I suspended "life." No dating no movies no traveling. I cut expenses everywhere, and the first thing I did was pay off my vehicles - truck and motorcycle. Then took that monthly payment money and every other penny and slammed it at my house, and paid that off. The goal now is to never have another loan for anything - although since I don't keep $300,000 liquid - everything except emergency fund is invested - I may need a very temporary loan to buy the next place since timing may not work out between buy/sell/close dates.
Cars boats planes whatever else - cash or I'm not purchasing.
Sell off an appendage?Sorry, can't vote, since I have no children the option for "Sell Off Someone Else's Children" is missing.
The “steal it” option seems to be missing....
It really depends. I haven't paid interest on a car loan in years, and I would get full insurance coverage on a new car anyway; so if the next purchase also came with 0.0 financing, it would be kind of silly not to finance. Why lay out money that could be getting better returns literally anywhere?
The only reason I can think of would be the insurance discount for a fully-paid-off car. Last time I checked, it was less than I would make keeping the money in a money market account. From what I've been told, that particular discount goes down the longer an insured has been claim-free. But it would be something I'd check again.
Basically, I'd do some math and choose the option that made the most financial sense. But at 0.0 percent, it's hard to think of a reason not to finance other than a desire to remain debt-free for personal or philosophical reasons.
Rich
I agree with Rich. I haven't had a car payment in four cars. I don't know if I could get sufficient funds by selling off my children, but perhaps the grandkids would net something.
I've never been offered an insurance discount for not having a car loan. A zero percent loan is enticing but often the same offer has some immediate cash benefit as well.
More often than not, 0% financing is merely a marketing ploy. The profit that would have come from interest payments is simply baked into the price of the car. Try negotiating a lower purchase price and see whether they still offer 0%.
When I was in my 20s I suspended "life." No dating no movies no traveling. I cut expenses everywhere, and the first thing I did was pay off my vehicles - truck and motorcycle. Then took that monthly payment money and every other penny and slammed it at my house, and paid that off. The goal now is to never have another loan for anything - although since I don't keep $300,000 liquid - everything except emergency fund is invested - I may need a very temporary loan to buy the next place since timing may not work out between buy/sell/close dates.
Cars boats planes whatever else - cash or I'm not purchasing.
You don't finance the things you want unless, as one poster has already said, the money you would use to make the purchase is earning higher returns than the finance rate you can obtain. You only finance the things you ABSOLUTELY NEED (meaning, something that keeps you healthy and/or makes sure you continue to earn money) and can't pay for, and in that case you buy the cheapest version available that'll get the job done and pay it off as fast as humanly possible.
I do not believe any one ever qualifies any way.More often than not, 0% financing is merely a marketing ploy. The profit that would have come from interest payments is simply baked into the price of the car. Try negotiating a lower purchase price and see whether they still offer 0%.
More often than not, 0% financing is merely a marketing ploy. The profit that would have come from interest payments is simply baked into the price of the car. Try negotiating a lower purchase price and see whether they still offer 0%.
Yeah. Sad thing is, consumer debt drives the economy. If to many people practiced what you preach we would be in recession. Scratch that, depression. Scratch that to, something lower than depression. ‘ell, our entire existence as an ‘economy’ is based on being trillions of dollars in debt. IBTL
And also before the lock: Huh?
Consumer debt drives the economy? Where's that coming from. Is your thesis that if the available capital for consumer purchases was limited to the total US payroll instead of the total borrowing limits of the consumers, then the economy would shatter? That's not likely.
Logically, if I make $50k and have credit cards I can spend another ~$20k. But I can't spend any of the $50k more than once, so my true spending capacity DECREASES because I'm servicing the interest on the 20k. That's not boosting consumer spending, unless you're in the financial markets collecting the interest. But the interest market isn't great either because of defaults (which happen regularly).
I do not believe any one ever qualifies any way.
I have never had a "New" vehicle. Most of my vehicles start out between 5 to 10 years old. I would love a new truck, but can not justify $35 to $50K to hall my *ss around. Just bought an 8 year old GMC Sierra for $10K. I'm good with that. Traded my 97 F150 for 3 months hangar rental..We have nearly always bought new and kept them until the repair cost outweighs the usefulness of the vehicle.
Is there such a thing as "new" in Alaska? LOLI have never had a "New" vehicle. Most of my vehicles start out between 5 to 10 years old. I would love a new truck, but can not justify $35 to $50K to hall my *ss around. Just bought an 8 year old GMC Sierra for $10K. I'm good with that. Traded my 97 F150 for 3 months hangar rental..
His story is almost identical to mine, except that he got an earlier start and was a bit more frugal than I was. So I don't get tired of hearing those types of stories. I "hope" they provide at least a guide to other young people who don't want to end up poor. I chose that route because I didn't want to end up like my parents; always in debt to the limit. When their debts started taking too much of their income, the would go to HFC (Household Finance Company) and take out a debt consolidation loan that extended their payments ever further. They were in debt till the day they died. And I wound up shouldering way too much of that debt.Nobody wants to hear this BS story any more.....
Blah, blah, blah,...cash, blah blah blah, top ramen.....
Step into the real work, em Kay?
They were in debt till the day they died. And I wound up shouldering way too much of that debt.
Because I loved them and if I hadn't made some of their payments they would have been evicted or had their car repossessed. They were already skimping on decent food and medical care. By then, it was already too late for me to consider myself an enabler.I gotta ask: Why? None of their debt was owed by you?
Because I loved them and if I hadn't made some of their payments they would have been evicted or had their car repossessed. They were already skimping on decent food and medical care. By then, it was already too late for me to consider myself an enabler.
I had a very good State College (Ga Tech) that I could go to and pay in-state tuition. It still took me 8 years to graduate, but I graduated with zero debt (and a lot of work history for my resume).