Positive equity on my vehicle - Dealer wants to buyback and put me in a newer modelm but I'm tossed.
Submitted by CarbonPrinted t3_126wyi8 in personalfinance
Hey there PF- I currently own a 2015 Honda CR-V, purchased in 2018 at 42,000 miles for $17,500. I didn't have much for the down payment, so the loan was taken out for $16,500 at 6.4%. In 2020 I refinanced the remaining $13,000 at 4.2%.
The dealership I bought it through is now looking to buyback the car and wants to sell me a newer model. Their offer comes as follows:
- $19,000 for the current vehicle
- Waiver of all dealer fees* (I would need more details from them on what this would entail)
- $0 down and 2.99% APR on a 5 year loan (through the dealership)
- Included service contract (NOT the extended warranty, but oil changes, wheel alignments, etc)
Current payment details:
- $7000 remaining
- 4.2% interest rate on the loan
- $306 monthly payments
- $114/mo for insurance ($125/mo if I upgraded to a newer model)
I currently owe $7,000 on the car and it still only has ~72,000 miles on it. I feel that if I took the offer, paid off the remaining $7,000 on the loan, I'd be left with $12,000 to put towards a newer model (2022 or 2023 CR-V) with an estimated cost of $31,000, so I believe I'd be financing ~$19,000 at 2.99% over the next 5 years, which is roughly equal to the payments I am currently making. Used models in the years I'm looking for (2020+) are harder to come by, but would be the preferred option if allowed with the buy-back/trade-in.
Upgrading my vehicle is not critical, but having a vehicle is important based on my region and interests. Updated safety features and some of the newer perks are nice, such as the on-screen GPS display and Android Auto. I'm not currently concerned about thre new loan period (extending it out 5 years instead of the ~2 I have left on my current if I only made minimum payments) and am in a position where I could feasibly pay an additional $200 towards the principle every month, potentially closer to $500. I have minimal debt otherwise, except for student loan payments that are expected to start in 2025. I'm in a HCOL area with moderate access to transit, so the vehicle is more for leisure (for now) and is not used for a daily commute except for days when I need it or to get me to the transit center.
Ideally, this would be the last vehicle I purchase for the foreseeable future, I'm just unsure if it actually makes sense to take the dealership up on this offer. My current expenses are only 45% of my monthly take-home with the rest being redirected towards savings (house, retirement, emergency fund) and fun stuff (hobbies, small trips, etc). The 45% includes rent, car payment, insurance, food, gas, utilities, and essentials.
So, PF experts. Do I reasonably take the offer or drop it? Can provide more details if needed.
theoriginalharbinger t1_jebbjzv wrote
> which is roughly equal to the payments I am currently making.
Gahhh... I die a little inside when I read this. Yeah, it's equal to the payments you're currently making, but how many months of current payments remain vs. the sixty months on the newly issued loan?