noles1983
Well-known member
If i got rid of cars that fast, i would pay more to have one of them subscription services, like Volvo. It makes zero sense, as others have pointed out, to buy/sell every 2 years.
leasing is expensive, leasing involves hands and obligations. With a loan, I am my own boss: I want to keep it, I wanted to change it any time. Leasing has always been, is and will be more expensive than a loan. Well, with leasing, I can only reduce taxes by monthly payment, and the loan uses a good % of depreciation, which is much more.If i got rid of cars that fast, i would pay more to have one of them subscription services, like Volvo. It makes zero sense, as others have pointed out, to buy/sell every 2 years.
leasing is expensive, leasing involves hands and obligations. With a loan, I am my own boss: I want to keep it, I wanted to change it any time. Leasing has always been, is and will be more expensive than a loan. Well, with leasing, I can only reduce taxes by monthly payment, and the loan uses a good % of depreciation, which is much more.
leasing is expensive, leasing involves hands and obligations.
please provide figures.I don’t think anyone is arguing this. Unfortunately, your personal spending habits are more expensive than leasing.
But as long as you’re happy!
please provide figures.
Tax included.
I do not agree with you, but I change every 2 years and it is not expensive. the car will cost me 500-650 bucks a month, it is cheaper than leasing the base trim, although I take medium or top trim.
please provide figures.
leasing is expensive, leasing involves hands and obligations. With a loan, I am my own boss: I want to keep it, I wanted to change it any time. Leasing has always been, is and will be more expensive than a loan. Well, with leasing, I can only reduce taxes by monthly payment, and the loan uses a good % of depreciation, which is much more.
You DO realize you are on the Telluride Forum, right?!Hi, Everybody.
Kia is getting more expensive, the explorer is getting cheaper.
I deposited today, returning the deposit for the Explorer Limited 2.3 Ecoboost. Telluride SX will land soon. Since I keep the car for no more than 2 years (about 30k km) and change it to a new one.
I would like to hear your advice? What you thinks about?
Kia will cost me $ 57 more a month.
+ 500 bucks on the go to install a hitch.
as an option, i still think I can take an explorer SR 3.0 hybrid, but in this case the kia will turn out a little more expensive. What do you think?![]()
I completely agree. great answer.Technically no discussion of sound financial decisions should ever include a new car. If all you care about is making the most of your money, you’d buy a fully- or mostly-depreciated reliable car and keep it as long as possible.
But cars are fun, new things are fun. If you can afford it, do whatever you want. No one needs to defend their decisions and no one needs to criticize other people’s decisions.
I personally know I’m going to spend $x amount a month on my vehicle(s). If when I’m ready to move on I’ve paid it off or I can get more for it than I happen to owe at the time, awesome.
I’m happy and this has worked for me for a while. If others are happy doing what they are doing (whatever that is), that’s good, too.
well, what do you think?You DO realize you are on the Telluride Forum, right?!.
ohh and buy the Telluride!!well, what do you think?![]()
We have the cheapest equipment, 718 per month for 24 months. This is 50% more than I pay on average.Leasing exists for people exactly like you, those who churn cars. Like i said, if i wanted a new vehicle every 2 years I would pay the $750/month for Volvo subscription for the XC90 that includes literally everything, even the insurance. But you do you, my dude. Not my money, whatever makes you happy. I would stick with the Kia over the Ford though.
I asked you for numbers, but you never did.I don’t think anyone is arguing this. Unfortunately, your personal spending habits are more expensive than leasing.
But as long as you’re happy!
you spent $36,700 over 5.4 years or $6,800/year to essentially lease a few vehicles.
You paid $566/month over the past 5+ years to buy and sell cars. After spending $37,000 you own nothing, and that doesn't account for the registration fees, etc... associated with each new vehicle.
You could have just kept that original Santa Fe @ $37,000 - it would be paid off and likely still running strong while your cost of ownership decreases with each passing day.
That's a horrendous financial practice.
However, to each their own so long as you're happy
But it is by no means "not expensive"
In addition to the figures above, I use depreciation, which gives me a decent amount to withdraw from taxes in the first 2 years.Also unless you're using each one as a business vehicle and benefiting from the tax savings/shelter you're losing hand over fist every time.
there are such cases. agreed with the bank, here the banks are loyal.If you lost your job tomorrow because of _______ reason. You're stuck with either making a payment you can't afford or have no car. I'll never understand why most people believe it's just normal to carry a financial liability indefinitely for cars like it's normal and "just something everyone does"
because of the weight, you can't fully depreciate the entire price of the Telluride in one tax year but can still depreciate it over 5 years like a sedan, etc.... This is the issue I just ran into, could only depreciate $18k in first year instead of $50k.I’m just curious, @Kwim, why wouldn’t you just lease to buy and get all the advantages of leasing along with lower APR then sell or trade in on another lease to buy? The net effect is the same but you probably need slightly better credit to get a lease. Who holds the title is irrelevant and it sounds like your pattern of buying fits this model. Plus you can choose to put some money down or none vs an auto loan that might require you to finance a certain amount to get a rate. The only difference is that the lease is considered debt on your credit rather than owing money on a depreciating asset.
Are you in the US? I’m guessing not if you are claiming depreciation on your taxes. I thought you need the SUV’s GVWR of over 5,000lbs (or maybe even 6,000?) which the Telluride is just under to claim it on taxes. Unless, I guess you are claiming the SUV as a passenger vehicle and claiming less?
My wife really likes the Aviator and that would be her first choice if we could afford it (we can't). I told her we could always get a base Aviator used for ~50K (maybe). I am still trying to convince her that the T-Ride is the better option from cost/benefit standpoint than any other options.When I purchased my 20 Telly SX P in November there was only one other contender on my list......the new Lincoln Aviator which had the same performance, tech and luxury level. The "Lincoln" label indicates the luxury level you expect....the KIA label has always indicated "cheaper". In the end the Telly beat the Lincoln on ALL at a price point 40K less than the Aviator and takes KIA to a new level in the car market! There is now 12K on the meter and not one issue has come up....the comfort and capability have been amazing.