I think its a bit mean insinuating nobody should buy a car without finance. It perfectly fine as long as you understand the costs.
Its a normal acceptable way now-a-days for people to have something they want and spread the cost, it doesn't mean you cant afford it but with everything a person needs and 26k being average wage in the UK, with statutory work place pensions and an average of 25k student loans for most you may bring home 16-1800 a month. Its not much, especially if you don't have a spouse.
Maybe it was different for you guys but as a 29yo whos just got on the ladder its not easy.
The UK average house cost is 272k. MOST lenders want 20% deposit off you so that's a 55k deposit (although some will still take 10%). Say you aren't living at home and renting and single, the uk average rent is 800 and you have no help from your family and with the average wage how does anybody afford to have anything but the essentials? Add on top of that bills, phone, insurance, tax, tv licence etc etc It does not leave a lot left at all!
That's without even adding a car, car insurance, tax and petrol into the equation.
How long would it take someone to get to that sort of deposit with the above? You would be broke for 5-10 years! Then an average mortgage of 30 years you will be in your 70s before its finished.
That's why many people now a days live with their parents for so long. In reality more than one in 10 adults are still living with their mother and father at the age of 40.
40!!!!! :|
Similarly, the average youth aspirations of earning more than £30,000 a year by the time they reached 31, but for 71% this dream has yet to become a reality.
The average cost in the UK of a brand new car is 18k. Which is why many cant afford to simply put 500 a month away and afford the car in 3 years time.
So I suppose what I'm trying to say is that most will accept that ye it will cost me more, but I can have what I want without having to either break into the fall back fund or wait 3-4 years to save to buy it outright.
Ive had 4 cars on finance which I'm not upset about. I ended up with good deals and without would have had to be much older to have the cars ive owned. Ive also had a couple of credit cards since I was 18 which I was advised to do to aid with credit history but used carefully. They were always paid on time and usually used for fuel etc
Credit is one of life's great Catch-22s. Especially for younger people that weren't gradually brought into the world of credit, with everyone throwing it at you left right and centre.
Let's say you're fresh out of school and want to get your first credit card. You fill out the forms and wait for the reply, only to find out a few weeks later that you've been rejected. Why? Because you DONT have a credit history. How do you establish a credit history? Well, you get a credit card, of course...
How is a bank loan granted, how is a mortgage granted, how is any finance granted? Credit history. Many of my friends have been denied simply because they don't have a credit history thinking they were smart not getting any credit at all.
The difference with car finance is that it is all in the vehicle, if people default the car is retrieved. If you take a bank loan then they will take the value of. Not specifically the car. Another reason people living on the edge take finance.
Before everyone flames me this is all hypothetical.
Obviously the absolute ends of extremes but when you break it down that's why people think - What can I afford per month.
What is bonkers is that these quoted figures are the AVERAGE costs in the UK and it is quite scary.
I suppose the amount of people who actually buy new cars over used is smaller because of the premiums you loose in the first 3 years. Many wont pay 800 for rent and will have a flat mate, not all average houses are 270k, not everyone has a student loan and many wouldn't push themselves to that extreme of financial collapse.
When you break it down similar to how a mortgage advisor does with your essential outgoings and whats left over is why many people see what can I afford per month. Obviously not everyone is in the same situation and as we are on a sports car forum that pretty much makes us all in the fortunate boat.
With my recent experience of buying a house and having to borrow nearly twice as much as my parents did 25 years ago is scary.
Anyway my post has no relevance to the thread just a reason why finance is an attractive option. To the point now where cash is not seen as positive because dealers will make money on the finance.
Whats more interesting is the trend of finance on appreciating older cars. Theres a reason Hexagon and others are buying up older Z4Ms and selling them for such a premium. They are appreciating, are nearly double what they were 3-5 years ago. They can charge a higher rate of interest as its a used vehicle, in 3 years they will not have depreciated and then will re-wrap them up in similar policies after giving poor trade in values because its an 'old car', Genius really.