yeah the maintenance thing was way off. i have a 2023 premium edition one, not this one, but basically the same thing and in the last year my maintenance was 20$ when i got the tires rotated and the free oil change at toyota. at the end of the day the car is a toyota with a suburu engine. its rated a 10/10 car for a reason. the insurance is correct, youre gonna look at between 150-200$ a month and gas will cost you about 50$ if you fill from E. she also didnt factor in the tags, titles, taxes and fees, which puts this car at about 42,000$ for a premium edition version. your car payment will be close to 800$ with no money down. plus every version of the car is rare. they dont make very many of them so most dealerships will inflate the price by about 5-10k. theres a bunch for sale rn that they are charging over 50k for
Toyota did NOT make this engine. Subaru did. That being said, they're much better than the old Subarus that had horrible head gaskets due to their head bolt design. Toyota did create the direct injection system, though. I still think these are going to prove to be very reliable sports cars.
@@user-vk2cd9qw7i Toyota did develop the engine and car. Toyota developed the engine in the BRZ/FRS/86 from the first generation. Subaru gave Toyota engineering information on the boxer engine and Toyota designed it in house.
I have a GR86 as of May 2023 - I have spent almost nothing in maintenance costs. Oil change is 50 bucks every 3000-4000 or so miles... beyond that I am not sure what costs there are incurred for "maintenance" early in the life cycle of a car like this unless you are driving it like you stole it.
just test drove a base model 2024 earlier today. very nice and fun car, salesman even said he could take off 4-5k off the price for me…it’s so tempting.
Did you factor in that this car requires 93 octane for the gas price average? Crazy how ownership costs can be over double the actual cost of a car. People dont often think about the bigger picture. Great breakdown.
I'd LOVE to see the sources you have for some of these numbers. Also, who's making ~$94k/yr and not putting any money down on a new car? And who is taking a 72 month loan? What about $13k down on a 60 month loan? Or even better, a 48 month loan? And $100/month for maintenance would be true on a 2002 4Runner, but a brand--new Toyota? That almost invariably comes with maintenance plans from your dealership (you should DEFINITELY be getting a maintenance plan included when you buy a new car these days)? Nah, your numbers are OFF.
You gotta remember this is for you to be paying for it as comfortably as possible and as for maintenance this is for you replacing tires brakes and oil when you should plus potential issues
I’m going with a larger than average down payment & a trade in so I’m practically putting down 50% of the cost for a base after tax. It’s gonna be a LONG year saving up but if you really want a car like this it’s not impossible but make sure you are in a good place to purchase a vehicle no matter if it’s a sports car or SUV you gotta be in a position to comfortably make those payments. Sadly, I’ll be going with a base but that’ll cut $5,000 off her estimate here along with my $15,000 or so down including my trade in value! Some may say “well, might as well save up the entire $30,000+ then” but I’m trying to rebuild my credit on top of my other car kinda going downhill in terms of value & reliability so I’m not in the most ideal situation but at least my payments will be something like $400 or less a month so I can live with that!
@ garrettstupperware3754 I’ll never understand you crazies who would rather spend real money, that you can invest in tax free retirement accounts, instead of finance a car you car trade in, trade down, or just get rid of with no penalty
Early maintenance cost is not much of a thing on toyotas. Toyota care takes care of some of the early preventative maintenance. This will help you pay down your loan faster. Also, I don't think the average gr86 buyer will be driving the average amount on the car. Lots of people will probably be looking at this as a "fun" second car, not commuter. Can't speak for everyone tho. Everyone should personalize their own numbers though. Also zero percent down is CRAZY lol
I don’t think a brand new Toyota is going to need that much maintenance.
yeah the maintenance thing was way off. i have a 2023 premium edition one, not this one, but basically the same thing and in the last year my maintenance was 20$ when i got the tires rotated and the free oil change at toyota. at the end of the day the car is a toyota with a suburu engine. its rated a 10/10 car for a reason. the insurance is correct, youre gonna look at between 150-200$ a month and gas will cost you about 50$ if you fill from E. she also didnt factor in the tags, titles, taxes and fees, which puts this car at about 42,000$ for a premium edition version. your car payment will be close to 800$ with no money down. plus every version of the car is rare. they dont make very many of them so most dealerships will inflate the price by about 5-10k. theres a bunch for sale rn that they are charging over 50k for
Toyota did NOT make this engine. Subaru did. That being said, they're much better than the old Subarus that had horrible head gaskets due to their head bolt design. Toyota did create the direct injection system, though. I still think these are going to prove to be very reliable sports cars.
@@user-vk2cd9qw7i Toyota did develop the engine and car. Toyota developed the engine in the BRZ/FRS/86 from the first generation. Subaru gave Toyota engineering information on the boxer engine and Toyota designed it in house.
I have a GR86 as of May 2023 - I have spent almost nothing in maintenance costs. Oil change is 50 bucks every 3000-4000 or so miles... beyond that I am not sure what costs there are incurred for "maintenance" early in the life cycle of a car like this unless you are driving it like you stole it.
@@khayon4364 She's using very generic numbers for an average car and average driver, neither of which suit this car.
just test drove a base model 2024 earlier today. very nice and fun car, salesman even said he could take off 4-5k off the price for me…it’s so tempting.
Thats awesome! Sounds like a good deal
how did it go?
Do it
Did you factor in that this car requires 93 octane for the gas price average? Crazy how ownership costs can be over double the actual cost of a car. People dont often think about the bigger picture. Great breakdown.
Yes, I factored in premium gas! And definitely! It’s so much more than just the payment !
I was looking to get into one of these to make my daily or track car. It's much cheaper than the m4, but still, this information is invaluable.
Buy an S2000, it’s way better.
@@Robsphotographyncs2k’s can’t drift
Great video, subbed!
Thanks for the sub!
Great video. How about doing the LC500?
We like the auto too. Keep at it… nice work..
Thanks! Will do!
I'd LOVE to see the sources you have for some of these numbers.
Also, who's making ~$94k/yr and not putting any money down on a new car? And who is taking a 72 month loan?
What about $13k down on a 60 month loan? Or even better, a 48 month loan?
And $100/month for maintenance would be true on a 2002 4Runner, but a brand--new Toyota? That almost invariably comes with maintenance plans from your dealership (you should DEFINITELY be getting a maintenance plan included when you buy a new car these days)?
Nah, your numbers are OFF.
You gotta remember this is for you to be paying for it as comfortably as possible and as for maintenance this is for you replacing tires brakes and oil when you should plus potential issues
You could always just jump on Toyotas website and do the numbers yourself since you don’t like the 72 month payment plan
Wtf its crazy, for this car almost 80k in 6 years, no way, better to get something else
Alot of high numbers were presumed for this video. I'd bear that in mind.
I’m going with a larger than average down payment & a trade in so I’m practically putting down 50% of the cost for a base after tax. It’s gonna be a LONG year saving up but if you really want a car like this it’s not impossible but make sure you are in a good place to purchase a vehicle no matter if it’s a sports car or SUV you gotta be in a position to comfortably make those payments. Sadly, I’ll be going with a base but that’ll cut $5,000 off her estimate here along with my $15,000 or so down including my trade in value! Some may say “well, might as well save up the entire $30,000+ then” but I’m trying to rebuild my credit on top of my other car kinda going downhill in terms of value & reliability so I’m not in the most ideal situation but at least my payments will be something like $400 or less a month so I can live with that!
CAP I make $40,000 a year and comfortably pay for it 😂😂😂
no way... what's ur interest rate?
how? u got bills like the rest of us?
@@blakeheisman8198 4.99%
@@shiftautomotive854 phone bill, rent, car insurance, subscriptions, single no kids 😂
@@GRTrueno how much is your car payment and what was the out the door price?
You want to own a 30k car make 6 figures 😢
Her numbers are going off averages which tend to be quite high. I make 64k and I own my Gr86 2023 (brand new) very comfortably.
I make 50k a year and am buying this car in cash. It's not that hard if you're frugal and know how to save/invest.
@@Chainwhips the guy that made the statement above has no idea what he’s talking about lmao , I’m doing the same
@@khayon4364how u got any other billsV
@ garrettstupperware3754 I’ll never understand you crazies who would rather spend real money, that you can invest in tax free retirement accounts, instead of finance a car you car trade in, trade down, or just get rid of with no penalty
Everybody: Who buys a sport car with an automatic anyways?
Me: Somebody with one leg?
Civic Si?
Early maintenance cost is not much of a thing on toyotas. Toyota care takes care of some of the early preventative maintenance. This will help you pay down your loan faster.
Also, I don't think the average gr86 buyer will be driving the average amount on the car. Lots of people will probably be looking at this as a "fun" second car, not commuter. Can't speak for everyone tho.
Everyone should personalize their own numbers though.
Also zero percent down is CRAZY lol
at this rate i can't even afford a house
I dunno but I bought it anyway so we're gonna find out
2021 lexus is350 f sport
I’ll just stick with my frs until these are used lol
I this, boys and girls… Is why we don’t finance depreciating liabilities.
Save your pennies and buy cars cash, be them old or fresh off the lot.
Gotta factor in a blown motor
Only if you plan on tracking it: Blown motors *not* on track make up about 1% of blown GR86 motors well within "lemon" rates.
@@khayon4364 Cool - do you have some data for that 1% rate?
If only i didn’t have to pay mortgage, be able to afford sny car, easily.
I make more than that, and I would not be comfortable at all with that monthly payment.
Been seeing it 40k plus around my Area ☠️💀☠️
Just because they ask it doesn't mean that's what they're willing to sell it for. You won't get what you don't ask for!
@@user-vk2cd9qw7i Yup. Gotta bullshit the stealerships into giving you a price YOU are willing to pay, not the other way around.
i mean is better to put 60% to 70% of a down payment between 20k or 25k is not hard to safe
Yikes.... besides the trueno clout. It doesnt make it worth it like the frs rs1 that came out in 2015 for that same price.
No fuckin way you need to make over 90,000 a year to afford this
I afford this at about 80,000 a year and my rent is over 1000 a month
Yeah she’s capping so hard
lol
That’s putting no money down what idiot does that put down 5-6k atleast I don’t buy cars without atleast 30-40%down I don’t finance more than 12k