Submitted by ederamon t3_z8bbbp in personalfinance
First time in this sub so please be gentle-
I'm 26 y/o and just graduated with my PhD. I've been driving a hand-me-down 2003 Nissan Altima for a good 8 years or so. It's a good car, gets me from point A to point B, but I'd like something I feel safer in (especially in snow). I've been planning on getting a car basically as soon as I sign on to a job (which I'm hoping is quite soon). I'm expecting a huge salary jump (from $35k/yr to >$120k/yr). Also, I've got a decent savings (about $42k including my TD account). I also have no debt, although my cost of living has gone up a bit recently. I'm looking to spend roughly $25k on a new 2023 Impreza. Given all of this info, does it make sense to buy a car upfront, or to finance it? I haven't shopped the rates much, but what I have seen is roughly 4% APR. I keep most of my savings invested in the S&P, which yields approximately 8% a year. So in theory, it would make sense to finance. But part of me doesn't want to have to borrow money if I don't have to. What makes the most sense financially?
​
TLDR; looking to buy a $25k car with $42k savings alongside likely a >3x salary increase. Pay upfront or finance?
sonnyfab t1_iyash0o wrote
If you can finance at 4%, then after you've started the job, that is a rate worth taking the financing. I haven't seen many 4% car loan offers lately though. At a rate higher than 5%, I'd recommend just paying for the car out of savings. (Mathematically, an 8% speculative return isn't worth as much as a 5% guaranteed return.)
You may need to finance the car for 1 payment period because a lot of new car incentives are through the dealer financing and not the dealership directly, but just ensure that there is no prepayment penalty and you can pay the car off when you get the first statement.
Edit: Also, unrelated to your question, make sure you have a 6 month emergency fund in a savings account beyond what you are spending on this car since you say most of your savings is in the stock market.