>have $3k >need car >parents will help me out if I find a good used car under $8k >other option is buying new
what have any of you done in this situation? I don't have a regular, steady paycheck (bartender) so I don't know if I should saddle myself with the debt or just buy a
how can you not find a good used car under 10, but you can find 1 under 5. Why would you need to finance anything when you said your parents will help you out up to 8? R u retard OP? it is okay if you are, just tell us first.
Daniel Long
Buy a well running econobox with scratched up paint for 2.5k and spend 200-300 bucks on basic car maintenence hand tools and a haynes manual. Do baseline maintenance on your days off. Have a decent daily driver that you don't have to worry about parking next to the buggy return. Problem solved.
Sebastian Williams
because there are none within 100 miles of me. Everything is either overpriced or 7k for something with 150k miles already.
Colton Young
okay, and that would be like a Honda Civic or Toyota or something? even some of those are going for $5-10k even with 100k+ mileage.
Colton Barnes
not op but should i buy a 2009 dodge charger for 3k with 80k miles?
Xavier Kelly
Holy fuck how can no one find a good car for under 8k. If I had 8k on hand I could buy the car I want to have. It would need work but not much.
Wyatt Barnes
How many floods has it been in?
Dylan Moore
none but it was a police car my dad bought from an auction. runs fine but needs a new console and radio
Joshua King
I guess it depends on what one considers "good".
Hunter Reed
Don't be scared by high mileage, I got a 98 civic with 250k miles and all it needed was spark plugs and wires and it runs tip top, bought it for 500 bucks (I have 3 cars and spent less than 5k on all of them combined)
Camden Allen
I wouldn't be scared but all I keep hearing is that I shouldn't waste the 3k on something that's just gonna fall apart in a few years, and to find something that will still have resale value when I can afford a better vehicle.
Jayden Anderson
Sound like a good deal to me. You could probably turn around and sell it for twice as much.
Benjamin Reyes
Lucky for me I don't really care for anything newer than 06. Too much bullshit in newer cars.
Oliver Bell
Bullshit, post up CL
Ryder Williams
If you keep the car in good condition I don't see why you couldn't resell it for what you bought it for when it's that cheap
Noah Sanders
I'll sell you my cavalier. It's already worth jack shit so you don't have to worry about depreciation.
Christian Clark
Yeah, these are people who don't take care of their cars. If you buy an old civic or corolla, there may be one or two maintenance problems that pop up, but if you read the sticky about what to look out for, assuming you follow it well, you should be able to find a car with 150-200k miles on it and take it all the way to 300k. The good thing about old econoboxes is that the people who buy them generally all want them for the same reason.
When it's that low of price lots, I've bought multiple 200k + vehicles
Sebastian Myers
There are literally 500 vehicles in your price range and under 100k. >Guys we are done here. OP is clearly retarded.
Zachary Thompson
>tfw his craigslist results are much, much better than mine living in Iowa is suffering
Ryan Cruz
if you look strictly at the number of listings, sure. but how many of those don't run, how many need all tires replaced? how many are pieces of crap, even for an "econobox"?
Oliver Miller
also, can you pick one or two, maybe even three, and show me what you mean? I look at the front page and can't see anything worthwhile.
Juan Ortiz
Take the police car
Cooper Wood
You can get a decent 90s shitbox for under 2k if you look hard enough.
Austin Clark
Damn near all of them run and look great. > tires. Really? You can't handle getting tires. I put used Michelins with 80% tread on my car for $200. You could get new lower quality tires for 400 or less.
5spd toyota corolla or honda civic (if you can find a clean one)
Box but not shit And good mpgees
Ayden Richardson
I bought my lesbian 2005 outback for 3k (with a shot suspension but it still rides good enough)
Bentley Mitchell
OP buy based on condition, and frankly just going off the previous owner. IE do they live in a decent house and take care of their yard? Is the car's interior clean and did they obviously take some pride in owning it? Do they have receipts of repairs, or at least a recollection of what's been done?
I'd say that overall trumps most make/model differences (to a degree). Having said that, I'm not recommending you buy a mid 2000s Audi Allroad just because some rich dude owned it.
If you're up north really check the car for rust.
I'll make this very easy for you (and fun for me): post your local craigslist and us a/o/tists will find you something decent.
Pic related is a '00 Maxima I scooped up for $1600 from a neighbor, with about $500 invested into new brakes and strut assemblies all around, some light rust-related bodywork, and a morning with an orbital buffer. Still far from perfect mechanically, but it's a reliable A-B car that cruises smoothly down the highway with A/C and plenty of power on tap.
A cheaper variant of the same car. On either one of these, confirm that the timing belt was changed per schedule, the 85k car is of particular concern, actually.