Quizzes & Puzzles0 min ago
Would You Buy A New Car?
32 Answers
http:// www.bbc .co.uk/ news/bu siness- 2379701 6
Interesting article but surely the best way to avoid depreciation is to not buy one in the first place. I have a mate who, against my advice, spent 40k on a new car, because "it needs to be reliable" - The garage has had it more than him and he's gutted. The sad thing is that new or old they can go wrong, many think new = good. My car cost 90k when new, I bought it 8 years old for less than a tenth of that.
Interesting article but surely the best way to avoid depreciation is to not buy one in the first place. I have a mate who, against my advice, spent 40k on a new car, because "it needs to be reliable" - The garage has had it more than him and he's gutted. The sad thing is that new or old they can go wrong, many think new = good. My car cost 90k when new, I bought it 8 years old for less than a tenth of that.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I'd never dream of buying a new car. 3 year old with sensible mileage for less than half the price of new.
Buy new for £20,000 and sell at 3 years for £8,000. Cost: £4,000 per year.
Buy the same car at 3 years old for £10,000, run it for three years, sell for £4,000. Cost: £2,000 per year.
It's a no-brainer.
The longer you keep it the cheaper it gets.
Buy new for £20,000 and sell at 3 years for £8,000. Cost: £4,000 per year.
Buy the same car at 3 years old for £10,000, run it for three years, sell for £4,000. Cost: £2,000 per year.
It's a no-brainer.
The longer you keep it the cheaper it gets.
For the last 12years I've been in the motability scheme and get a new car every three years.Before that when I used to buy my own cars I used to change every 2-3 years and I'd look for an ex-demo about 3-6 months old with low mileage. Nowadays I'd possibly go for an ex motability car. I know they are three years old but they all go in with full service history,are clean, well maintained and usually with a genuine low mileage,mine for instance average between15-18k over three years
I would never pay for a new car. If a car has had a reasonably sensible owner previously, they will usually have sorted out any problems already - like you're normally better off buying reconditioned white goods, than new. A new car might have a good warranty, but that doesn't help the inconvenience of it being in a garage.