Unless it was a piece of shyt you paid a good bit and could've gotten a 2016 something for what you paid, not necessarily that type but something new.Bought a 2013 used car and paid in full. Didn't want to have car payments. I can't afford it.
Perhaps, but it's pretty good. Mileage good and it's fuel efficient. Only a light inside the car was out.Unless it was a piece of shyt you paid a good bit and could've gotten a 2016 something for what you paid, not necessarily that type but something new.

That's not a lot of money. You have bigger problems if you can't afford that.
Funny y'all are discussing this topic. I was just thinking about how my wife's dad and some his friends are in that 7 figure annually range but drive buckets they all got nice houses. You would never know they had money with what they drive and wear. Only one of them out of 5 drive nice cars he got a Lamborghini, Bentley all that good stuff. The ones I know who got a lot of money are conservative. They always preach to me about saving and setting yourself up for early retirement. That's why I'm against leasing and financing cars because normal people don't account for life's end game they don't think retirement or rainy funds when something crazy will happen. They think well I'm making this much monthly I afford this car note. When I think back I cringe sometimes at the things I use to do to prove I got it like make 50k and drive a s63 while laughing at the guy driving the Toyota but in reality the guy with the paid off Toyota should be laughing at me for dumping so much of disposable income into a depreciating asset. When I shoulda just been smart with my disposable income and put that towards investment,bonds and property. But you live and you learn![]()
Cars being depreciating assets is myth. Of course the dealer ain't gonna buy it back for what he sold it to you for. Doesn't mean you can't sell it to someone else for close to what you paid for it. Also having a good reliable car can be a gateway to a great job and other opportunities.
Most things depreciate over time. Including the ever so coveted homes and property. And some cars actually go up in value, just as homes and property. Again, value is always subjective.That still makes it a depreciating asset... lol. If an item decreases in value over time, regardless of the rate at which it decreases, it is a depreciating asset.
You don't have to share space in order to share expenses. I'm a big fan of multi-family properties, where everyone can have their own space.I'm a private person so that doesn't really work for me. I had roomates in college and the sanity provided by living on my own is worth the loss of "wealth".
Bought a 2010 Camaro Ss in 2010. Lost it due to a car accident in 2014. That was God.Pay 900 a month on car note and insurance brehs
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But I'd rather put that more toward shares of the company than the car itself 
That's 6k a year that could be going toward a Roth IRA or appreciating bondsThat's not a lot of money. You have bigger problems if you can't afford that.
Of course if the choice is between not saving and saving via a Roth IRA for the future, then the answer is that you should open up a Roth IRA, but in the long run you're still wasting money by giving it to Uncle Sam.That's 6k a year that could be going toward a Roth IRA or appreciating bonds
Bought a 2013 used car and paid in full. Didn't want to have car payments. I can't afford it.