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Showing Original Post only (View all)The New Math of Driving Your Car Till the Wheels Fall Off [View all]
https://www.wsj.com/personal-finance/the-new-math-of-driving-your-car-till-the-wheels-fall-off-9c23b7bchttps://archive.ph/mkjqA
The New Math of Driving Your Car Till the Wheels Fall Off
Drivers rethink the optimum number of years to hold on to a car as the costs of ownership increase
By Joe Pinsker
May 1, 2024 9:00 am ET
Jeremy Morris is used to friends making fun of the Toyota Tacoma he has driven for 24 years. He still insists it was one of the best money decisions of his life.
The 45-year-old financial adviser in Coeur dAlene, Idaho, estimates he saved more than $100,000 by never replacing the pickup. His ballpark figure factors in what he would have spent on a new car every five years, minus the roughly $20,000 he paid for repairs and upkeep over 300,000 miles.
There have always been people who relish driving cars till the wheels fall off, but the case for this frugal personal-finance move has grown stronger as the costs of car ownership have ballooned.
The average transaction price on a new vehicle was $46,660 in March, compared with $39,950 three years earlier, according to Edmunds, an online car-shopping guide. Repair and maintenance costs are up 8.2% year-over-year, and insurance costs are up 22.2%, Labor Department data show.
To cope, many owners are squeezing more life out of their current ride. U.S. vehicles average age hit a record 12.5 years in 2023, increasing for the sixth straight year, according to S&P Global Mobility.
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OEM is original equipment manufacturer-when I drove Volvos, I went to an independent Volvo mechanic and he used only OEM
NoSheep
May 2024
#51
i remember reading in old books where the local skin flint at 80 was still driving his original model t.
AllaN01Bear
May 2024
#23
Only problem with that is, after too many years, the car can become unreliable.
raccoon
May 2024
#32
Just sold my 2005 Ford Focus 5-Speed with 235,000 miles. I saved & got a new Corolla for cash- upgraded to a better
NBachers
May 2024
#33
I bought my Acura new twelve years ago, and is pretty much at the average age mentioned in the article.
Aristus
May 2024
#42
Just got a 1966 1/2 ton long bed chevy pickup from the elderly neighbor. Traded some labor for it, got the title!
gay texan
May 2024
#56
I'm currently looking for kids and no doubt going to get them a 2012+ with 90 -110k miles on it. People keep their cars
uponit7771
May 2024
#60