Not referring to vehicle specifically. Referring to putting a teenage driver on an almost-new vehicle. But it sounds like OP already knows that.Why so high?
Not referring to vehicle specifically. Referring to putting a teenage driver on an almost-new vehicle. But it sounds like OP already knows that.Why so high?
Not referring to vehicle specifically. Referring to putting a teenage driver on an almost-new vehicle. But it sounds like OP already knows that.
My brother had a Diesel that VW just bought back from him. Only cost him $2800 for three years.They seem to pass their emissions testing with flying colors................
I agree with the beater part. There are lots of very solid used cars that sell for practically nothing out there. I sold my 2003 Prius last week for $2,000 to a teenage gal. Not the prettiest car, but it was as dependable as a lot of new cars, safe, great gas mileage, kind of did what a car is really made for. My daughter got a 02 Taurus when she started driving, and it was perfectly fine. Just baffles me to drive through a school parking lot and see all the near new cars that someone is financing for their kid.
FYI I went with a 2015 Chrysler 200 limited. Pretty nice car. Nice options. Good price. Thanks for the all the input. Just could not pull the trigger on the Volkswagon after some of the reviews. Chrysler has always made a pretty solid car and have been around for ever. Plus they had two years left on the warrenty
FYI I went with a 2015 Chrysler 200 limited. Pretty nice car. Nice options. Good price. Thanks for the all the input. Just could not pull the trigger on the Volkswagon after some of the reviews. Chrysler has always made a pretty solid car and have been around for ever. Plus they had two years left on the warrenty
God choice. The 200 has pretty crappy resale value, which is a plus in your case and I think they are pretty reliable.
I am rethinking my old "drive it for 10 years" approach to cars. With all of the fancy electronic and computer stuff minor stuff on old cars is not minor dollars to fix. Kinda like having the warranty for some protection against the computer gremlins etc.
I disagree. Cars run reliably longer than they ever have, and a big reason is because of all the electronics. While it was cheaper to fix cars 25 years ago, it felt like that was all I did and I got tired of doing it. The last five cars we bought were used with quite a few miles (only one had less than 80K) and we've driven them for a long time. I've never sold one due to excessive repair bills. We either got tired of driving it, or in one case, the car was totaled.