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this post was submitted on 23 Feb 2024
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[Dormant] Electric Vehicles
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I still can't really comprehend who are the people who buy brand new cars. Why would anyone pay so much extra?
People talk about how quickly a car’s value drops in the first couple years but that only matters if you sell in the first few years. Most modern cars are trouble-free for 10+ years, so why risk buying someone else’s lemon when I can buy new and not worry about it for the next decade, and the price isn’t so bad over that timeframe
Can't have a supply of used cars without someone buying them new first.
I'm thankful for those who "take one for the team" so that I can buy at a palatable price. But when I think of how much my income would have to increase that I'd be comfortable paying new car prices, I don't believe there are that many people who are that rich to account for the number of new cars that get sold.
The reality is many new car buyers stretch their budgets a lot more than you and I would be comfortable doing. Lots of cultural conditioning, cars as a status symbol, etc mean lots of poor financial decisions.
You are certain that the car will work if you take care of it. Used can be abused. If you have money to spare - why not.
I see that exactly opposite. Brand new can have manufacturing defects, warranty issues. A used car is proven. As long as you get it professionally checked over for mechanical issues, a late model car is very likely to be trouble free.
Ehhhh im currently driving a Gen 1 Prius (2003) that I bought at auction for $500.
I have less than $2000 in it all-in (everything except fuel and insurance, even oil changes).
I've put about 55k miles on it and it pulls a steady 43-44 mpg
Hysteria over battery issues has turned out to be exactly that
these 22 year old batteries are fine. Being used (within the design tolerance) keeps them fresh.
I recently bought new, but that was about a year ago when the used market was upside down, so we bought new for only a couple grand more than a one/two year old used was at the time. Although that's probably not the typical experience.