Submitted by octotron3000 t3_10p3dhx in personalfinance
octotron3000 OP t1_j6i391q wrote
Reply to comment by Nickyweg in I have a financed car and less than 30 days before navy basic training. by octotron3000
Would yall recommend making payments through basic, and then sell it when I have my enlistment bonus to make up the difference, it'll be 7 months before I get time to sell it.
SolutionLeading t1_j6i3ezv wrote
If you can’t afford to pay the difference on the loan and can’t get $18k for it in private sale, then this is probably your only option.
NoFilterNoLimits t1_j6i3roo wrote
Have you even tried to sell it yet? Try. Based on the KBB values you posted, it’s entirely possible you break even. Don’t hold the car for 7 more months while it depreciates because you assume you’ll get under 18k now. You said KBB goes as high as 22k. It doesn’t cost you a dime to take it by Carmax or Carvana and at least find out.
Make your decisions with facts, not assumptions
123456478965413846 t1_j6ippdc wrote
> You said KBB goes as high as 22k
Actually, OP said new it was 22k. They said they owe 18k and the KBB value is 15k.
NoFilterNoLimits t1_j6kkex2 wrote
D’oh. It was too early for me to be reading correctly
I’d still get a quote before trusting KBB in this market
123456478965413846 t1_j6lbrka wrote
Definitely, KBB is a good place to get a rough idea of value. But I have had cars where I got way more or way less than KBB estimated they were worth.
octotron3000 OP t1_j6i7kzy wrote
Does it depreciate from time or mileage? Because It will not be moving, thank you for this advice btw.
texanchris t1_j6i8bw6 wrote
Both.
curtludwig t1_j6kf6c8 wrote
Both but KBB is slow to react to market changes and this has been a very hot sellers market. Call Carvana/CarMax/whatever is in your area and see if anybody wants it.
Just because KBB says $15k doesn't mean that's what you can actually get. Look around and see what a comparable car would cost.
Imaginary_Shelter_37 t1_j6i42gb wrote
Where will the car be when you are in basic? If it is parked the entire time, you may be able to lower the cost of your insurance. That should give you some extra money to make up the difference.
octotron3000 OP t1_j6i7217 wrote
At my grandma's in a safe place, no one can drive it because gap insurance will not cover it.
EcoAffinity t1_j6i8060 wrote
A lack of insurance will not stop a more unscrupulous family member from joyriding your car.
octotron3000 OP t1_j6i8ta9 wrote
It's guaranteed no one will drive it, I'm in a unique circumstance so that's no issue.
Imaginary_Shelter_37 t1_j6idnjt wrote
Put the bare minimum insurance that is required to keep the cost down. A higher deductible may help too.
Rubicksgamer t1_j6i627l wrote
Also your insurance is the same. Shop around over the next week and get that cheaper.
Because you have a Leon on it you will still need full coverage you should be able to drop off a couple hundred a month just from that.
YesICanMakeMeth t1_j6jxn6o wrote
It's a lot better to get rid of it. Then you're not paying interest on the loan and also riding the depreciation curve on the asset value. You'll have more money in the end if you do it that way than paying for a car you aren't using. But yeah, if you can't find enough to cover the difference via a reasonable interest loan then you have no choice.
Viewing a single comment thread. View all comments