Want To Be Rich??? Drive A Beater P.O.S.

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 1 окт 2024

Комментарии • 4,7 тыс.

  • @williamholtonjr.8577
    @williamholtonjr.8577 Год назад +6177

    Saw this quote a few years ago and have always remembered it: "Using money you haven’t earned to buy things you don’t need to impress people you don’t like won't make you happy".

    • @Silverdragon517
      @Silverdragon517 Год назад +33

      So true

    • @Yakuzachris10
      @Yakuzachris10 Год назад +181

      Fight club

    • @NCGNTO202
      @NCGNTO202 Год назад

      @@machinesnmetal I've made a hobby out of digging through thrift store shelves. You'd be amazed what people throw out that is perfectly useable.

    • @dodgerblue7381
      @dodgerblue7381 Год назад +41

      @@machinesnmetal Not to compete but my truck is 28 years old, I have had it for 11 years and I paid $2000 for it. It may not look like much but so far it has gotten me from point A to point B and held down the spot in my driveway where it is parked.
      I bet that your truck will last another 10 with continued care.

    • @xThe_Chief
      @xThe_Chief Год назад +36

      Dave Ramsey

  • @anahfig2467
    @anahfig2467 Год назад +1195

    “If it costs you your peace, it’s too expensive.” I remind myself of this all the time.

  • @maryjanegreen7601
    @maryjanegreen7601 Год назад +1804

    “Normal is getting dressed in clothes that you buy for work and driving through traffic in a car that you are still paying for-in order to get to the job you need to pay for the clothes and the car, and the house you leave vacant all day so you can afford to live in it.”
    ― Ellen Goodman

    • @josephhobbs4754
      @josephhobbs4754 Год назад +110

      Glad my wife works from home so one of us can enjoy the house all day.

    • @maryjanegreen7601
      @maryjanegreen7601 Год назад +39

      @@josephhobbs4754 Saves on transportation expenses too!

    • @bobralph5072
      @bobralph5072 Год назад +62

      That is a perfect analogy of the American dream.

    • @krasavchik8714
      @krasavchik8714 Год назад +82

      @@josephhobbs4754 People underestimate how much money family saves if wife is a stay at home mother. Also a lot more appreciation for a hard working husband. Less feminism and more femininity.

    • @mikec7373
      @mikec7373 Год назад +11

      I can't stand quotes like this. It's not helpful in anyway

  • @Shawn_O
    @Shawn_O Год назад +559

    Scotty Kilmer (a mechanic RUclipsr) says: rich people buy cheap cars but broke people buy luxury cars. So true😂

    • @Kenny2k08
      @Kenny2k08 10 месяцев назад +45

      Bs if I had 100 million bucks I wouldn’t be driving a beater that’s for sure

    • @MaliEndz
      @MaliEndz 7 месяцев назад +5

      @@Kenny2k08no but people much better off like successful real estate investors do recommend driving beaters and alot do so themselves

    • @TheRealCatof
      @TheRealCatof 6 месяцев назад +23

      @@Kenny2k08Most luxury cars you see on the roads are leased and driven by people that can't afford them.

    • @Steve1766
      @Steve1766 6 месяцев назад +5

      94 Celica 💪🇯🇵 *TOYOTAAAAAA*

    • @Steve1766
      @Steve1766 6 месяцев назад +17

      ​@@Kenny2k08even if i was i Billionaire i would still drive a Beater because i don't like Modern Technology and Design

  • @BrotherJudahLion
    @BrotherJudahLion Год назад +1097

    This video came right on time. Tomorrow I was going to trade my 20 year old car and get a $600 car payment for 6 years. I decided instead to put 1k into my car and keep driving it. Thank you

    • @kensmith2796
      @kensmith2796 Год назад +86

      New cars are garbage. Don't buy one. you are better off with your 20 year old vehicle.

    • @Brandon-uy1uv
      @Brandon-uy1uv Год назад +38

      20 year old is still new xD I drive a 1991 Nissan Maxima. The fuel economy is trash thou, but then again I work from home and I drive it like a race car xD
      If I could buy another car it would be a 1998 manual nissan sentra to be able to take on road trips for dirt cheap.
      My maxima has never let me stranded because I fix it when I see a problem emerging, not when it breaks down.
      Take care of your car and it will take care of you

    • @rattanack1413
      @rattanack1413 Год назад +16

      Drive till the wheels fall off. If you have engine problems look at car forms and ask for help. Most hondas and toyota before 2010 you can get a low mile engine installed from 1500-3000$

    • @Zinger3030
      @Zinger3030 Год назад +1

      Great stuff. Stay strong.

    • @anthonyjohnsonjr8865
      @anthonyjohnsonjr8865 Год назад +2

      I am glad you spoke about this subject I read a article it stated the average car. Owner over their entire lifetime spends over 300,000dollars lifetime in new vehicles 🚗 just to own a beater in the end… when you see those numbers you realize that you could have spent your money better elsewhere…? Just even half of that in any car investment period will make you a ton of money 💵

  • @jwetzel3141
    @jwetzel3141 Год назад +397

    This guy and I accidentally did a little bumper car action in a parking lot the other day. We both drove a POS. We both didn’t care and went on our way. That’s freedom.

    • @christineshah7330
      @christineshah7330 Год назад +23

      My husband just did that the other day. Beaters for the win!

    • @garygerard4290
      @garygerard4290 Год назад +3

      ha ha ha - Great!

    • @oscarbear7498
      @oscarbear7498 Год назад +14

      In a world where everyone drives a pos , insurance rates drop to basically free xD

    • @brianf8621
      @brianf8621 Год назад +8

      I tried to explain this to people but they don’t get it.
      I purchased a 200k mile GMC truck for $100. Drove it for 10 years with a budget of $500 a year for failures. I only exceeded that 1 year when the clutch went out. That is 49k of cost saved over 10 years. It is about what you spend not just what you make.

    • @RennieAsh
      @RennieAsh Год назад +2

      Someone ran into me the other day. Would I prefer to not have a slightly damaged bumper, sure, but it's not worth $500 for insurance excess.

  • @bluemoondiadochi
    @bluemoondiadochi Год назад +453

    "I want a car. I don't want the stress of a car."
    Mic drop Sir. well said.

    • @larryzan8942
      @larryzan8942 Год назад

      Get a rental …the best vehicle u can have is your legs

    • @bluemoondiadochi
      @bluemoondiadochi Год назад +6

      @@larryzan8942
      1. Dont help in my situation, i live in middle of nowhere. Rental works for city people.
      2. nope, best vehicle arent your legs, its a bicycle or scooter esp if you're skinned financially. try going 10 miles one way on foot. and then back. after physical work. so nah fam. you can walk if you want but im keeping my bicycle and scooter. they saved me a lot of money and opened up a lot of opportunities that i didnt have walking or using public transport.

    • @jondough3339
      @jondough3339 Год назад

      Then you should lease

    • @Tbird761
      @Tbird761 Год назад +3

      I sold a newish car once. I wasn't excited about letting it go, but what I didn't expect was how much less stressed I was not constantly worrying about it being damaged when I was out.

    • @bluemoondiadochi
      @bluemoondiadochi Год назад +2

      @@jondough3339 lease is equally idiotic: i pay like i have it buy without ACTUAL benefits of owning property. plus its clauses upon clauses which i dont wanna deal with. nah fam. when i buy a car it-ll be a smallish old car i can sell for what i buy it for. if i splurge a bit of money on it it will be a reliable vehicle.

  • @genestone4951
    @genestone4951 11 месяцев назад +164

    I agree with this SO MUCH. I bought a diesel Benz for $1k. Drove it for over 200K miles; and then sold it for.... $1k. Loved that car. Wish I still had it!

    • @gab1172
      @gab1172 10 месяцев назад

      Wow

    • @vulture4117
      @vulture4117 10 месяцев назад +6

      those old Benz cars go crazy

    • @rebeltheharem7028
      @rebeltheharem7028 2 месяца назад

      My dad had an old 70's diesel benz as well. It lasted so long, that if it didn't get wrecked, he'd still be driving it. They last crazy long.

    • @EugenBurlacu
      @EugenBurlacu Месяц назад

      it does not help to save money if the wife wants a lexus convertible

    • @SN-cb9xj
      @SN-cb9xj Месяц назад +7

      @@EugenBurlacu Sack up and tell her no.

  • @jeffreyblanton9877
    @jeffreyblanton9877 Год назад +969

    I drove a beater for 30 years and finally bought a newer car recently only because I feel pretty secure with my situation. This man’s advice is spot on. The majority of individuals should absolutely be driving a beater but there is a point in life when you have saved saved saved and it’s now time to enjoy the fruits of your labors. It’s very difficult to splurge on something like a new car when you have spent your entire life being cheap. It’s actually harder than saving money in my opinion.

    • @defaultYTchannel
      @defaultYTchannel Год назад +25

      Exactly my situation - I’ve had a car from new since 2003, which broke down costing me 2.5k last year. I’ve been putting off buying a new car as there are of course better investments out there than a new car! Having said that I don’t have any debt now, and no dependents, so I’m thinking with the supply chain situation only going to get worse, if I don’t get one now i won’t be able to get the new car I want in the future. Of course second hand is way better value for money - but I like owning cars from new (just me). Enjoy the new motor!

    • @rogersmith7396
      @rogersmith7396 Год назад +30

      Cars are not enjoyable. That is sellers propaganda. At best they are necessary. If you lived in a city with good mass transport like London you would never own a car.

    • @michaelsmith-bn6no
      @michaelsmith-bn6no Год назад

      @@rogersmith7396 Wrong. I don't want to spend any time amongst 50% of people who are atheists. People generally just piss me off. The younger they are, the worse they are.

    • @johndoe-by4up
      @johndoe-by4up Год назад +13

      I been driving beater my whole life my kids and wife are in a nice car
      But I own a house
      And literally can do whatever I want if I wanted to but I would like to buy a new integra type s lol to

    • @thevulture5750
      @thevulture5750 Год назад +4

      Did you finally decide to buy the base model car, and the dealership tried to talk you out of it because they want to upsell you, but the newest base model is so nice compared to what you're used to?

  • @jnucleo
    @jnucleo Год назад +646

    I drove 120 miles a day commuting for years in a 1994 Honda Accord that I bought with 100,00 miles. I did basic maintenance during that time and drove it to 385,000 miles, and even then was able to sell it for $800! One of the best cars ever built for the long haul and super dependable.

    • @selfoblivionalex6262
      @selfoblivionalex6262 Год назад +3

      Great advice my dude! I remember when I first began to drive I would get nervous driving my high mileage Taurus during long commutes. At the time were you able worried about your car breaking down at random while driving to work or home.

    • @jnucleo
      @jnucleo Год назад +24

      @@selfoblivionalex6262 The old Honda's of the 80s and 90s were the golden years for Honda. That said, the components and quality control were top notch. Various parts sourced to Nippondenso and others were of top quality. Honda's electrical systems were the best in the world for reliability, much better than German cars. So the cars would run 200k with all the original parts starters, alternators etc. no problem. So I didn't have much fear of breaking down. I'll compare this to a 79 Dodge Omni I owned that I drove to 185,000 miles. It's distributor literally self-destructed on the highway at speed (bearing failure). Also had the clutch pedal fail due to it's being made from cast Aluminum! And the craziest part of that car, the rear window literally shattered one night. It had the big hatchback. The 70s were the decade when America really began it's decline.

    • @AnonymousGameWarden
      @AnonymousGameWarden Год назад +1

      Congrats. You played yourself lol.

    • @angelmaldonado5657
      @angelmaldonado5657 Год назад +9

      Same thing here except my car was a 1994 Toyota celica they don’t make ‘em the same anymore

    • @AnonymousGameWarden
      @AnonymousGameWarden Год назад

      @@angelmaldonado5657 because the celicas guzzle gas

  • @davedamiano
    @davedamiano Год назад +528

    Absolutely right. 25 years ago I started paying cash for whatever POS car I could afford. I put away a small portion every month to pay for repairs and save for the next beater. I always had enough on hand to repair or replace the car. Gradually, over the years, I moved up in quality and cost, but I still pay cash from the money I have set aside for a car. This is the main way we got out of debt and became financially comfortable.

    • @joaniepeters2565
      @joaniepeters2565 Год назад +12

      I do the exact same thing

    • @iamasmurf1122
      @iamasmurf1122 Год назад +3

      you should have invested in crypto

    • @sooner91
      @sooner91 Год назад +5

      @@iamasmurf1122 yeah crypto is doing really well

    • @davedamiano
      @davedamiano Год назад +6

      ​@@iamasmurf1122 Investing is great, done plenty of it. Without financial discipline, it can be a recipe for disaster. On the other hand, I know people who have become multi-millionaires just by living frugally.

    • @nuckels188
      @nuckels188 Год назад +5

      Housing is the problem for me lol

  • @teliramirez3914
    @teliramirez3914 Год назад +302

    One of my greatest memories was driving up to the drive thru window at the bank in a geo metro to deposite a 60k check from a real estate flip profit. The way they looked at me was priceless!

    • @islesanctum833
      @islesanctum833 Год назад +19

      That's called interest on your payback....love it

    • @Maartwo
      @Maartwo Год назад +5

      That's the best. Either that or rolling up to a fancy joint in your beater and pick up the bill and pay it in full.

    • @rashb3994
      @rashb3994 11 месяцев назад +14

      Shout out to the Geo Metro. I used to get insane gas mileage in that thing. That was a great value car.

    • @chillydawgg4354
      @chillydawgg4354 10 месяцев назад +3

      Congratulations on driving up the cost of housing in the name of personal profit

    • @teliramirez3914
      @teliramirez3914 10 месяцев назад +2

      @chillydawgg4354 Nah, I reinvested. I'm saving up for a yatch. Boats and hoes, bro!

  • @davider3568
    @davider3568 Год назад +1311

    My father always said "...once you buy a car, you'll always be poor."
    How right he was.

    • @erakkovaatainen148
      @erakkovaatainen148 Год назад +51

      I don't even have one and life couldn't be better. No car expenses at all.

    • @karl_margs
      @karl_margs Год назад

      ​​@@erakkovaatainen148I share a 2012 Prius with my partner and we only drive a couple of times a week between the two of us. Walk/bike/transit for most trips. I'll take our nice vacations over a new car any day!

    • @Havealocalife
      @Havealocalife Год назад +25

      Yeah, but what do you do if you really like cars?

    • @porcupinepunch6893
      @porcupinepunch6893 Год назад +50

      @@Havealocalife Be poor I suppose

    • @steve8803
      @steve8803 Год назад +47

      @@Havealocalife You be patient, spend frugally and invest wisely and you can buy whatever car you want. If you lack patience, you'll never get the ultimate prize and you'll always be a slave to the lender.

  • @jodo7814
    @jodo7814 Год назад +565

    I remember saving almost $20k in two years while working at a fast food joint, driving an old minivan that was paid off, and staying home instead of going out in my early 20s. Put myself through college after that. No debt.
    Edit: for those of you wondering about the college, I paid for the first two semesters, and then got financial aid (scholarships and grants) for income level and academic achievement for a full ride after that.

    • @ryang.5094
      @ryang.5094 Год назад +16

      Smart

    • @daniilvolkov8790
      @daniilvolkov8790 Год назад +12

      Waiwut? Car prices are roughly the same here too but we can't even earn $20K at a fast food joint in 2 years, let alone save any money. Living costs are only smaller with rent. Utilities and food prices are roughly the same. That being said, you Americans are being thoroughly raped in housing rent. Rent here in downtown is around 700-1000 eur, other parts of town as low as 450...and we are at a price high.

    • @stevestevens502
      @stevestevens502 Год назад +6

      i wish i saved/invested my money in my 20's instead of partying...

    • @INTERNATIONALvids
      @INTERNATIONALvids Год назад +14

      The key is not having kids

    • @DerpFisk0151
      @DerpFisk0151 Год назад +2

      Are you me? I did the same thing lol

  • @orion7873
    @orion7873 20 дней назад +22

    When I was young, I was poor and wanted to be rich so I could buy fancy stuff... Thankfully I was really cheap and never spent money so now I have lots of money and after being cheap for so long, I really don't even want the stuff anymore. I like nice clean stuff but it doesnt have to be fancy.
    My dad is the same way. He has a networth of over 2 million dollars. He likes to drive his little old 1989 Nissan truck. He likes it mostly for one reason. When people ask him "when are you gonna get rid of that old truck?" and he always says "what are you talking about, 6 more payments and this baby is mine" ... he laughs and so does everyone else. He loves that joke.

  • @JoshDTech
    @JoshDTech Год назад +359

    As a mechanic, I would take the 20 year old Hyundai. New Buicks are maintenance nightmares

    • @brawlgammer4424
      @brawlgammer4424 Год назад +46

      Whoever wrote that letter has no idea about how reliable some 20 year old "beaters" are.
      With all the technology in cars nowadays, from what I've heard from friends in the industry, often time newer cars are less reliable and a wallet blackhole when something breaks down.
      I'll keep driving my 17 year old, 170k miles+ Corolla, until it completely dies lol

    • @drewappleton5052
      @drewappleton5052 Год назад +21

      @@brawlgammer4424I’m driving an 18 year old Corolla, It’s never let me down so I see no reason to get rid of it

    • @The_Gallowglass
      @The_Gallowglass Год назад +22

      Get a 2004 corolla. Easy to work on, will last forever, cheap to maintain, good on gas

    • @XenomorphLV426
      @XenomorphLV426 Год назад +8

      Really? A 20 yr Korean car?

    • @Greg-zr2pf
      @Greg-zr2pf Год назад

      @@jayc4715 and Honda

  • @danielmcclorey6606
    @danielmcclorey6606 Год назад +153

    I bought a 2010 Corolla 2 yr ago. It's very low maintenance and I've built wealth in that time. He's very right. Young people listen up, try to live cheap for awhile and build wealth.

    • @eric6rock
      @eric6rock Год назад +3

      My Brother Gifted me his Car a Old Ford Escape 2002 I’ve been working and saving a ton. And yup, with that money I could do a lot of things and fun things such as going out, and snowboarding with Friends. With the money I have managed to buy a motocross bike new not the best decision but one to build my credit.
      Still I’m in no worry of debt just my bills I could pay. I have been raised from a single mother and seen and heard the struggles of Debt.
      Still I have money in my account and enjoy the things I like even with a good old Beater.
      Best thing of all you would enjoy the Luxury after so many years of driving or riding the beater.
      Still plan on driving it until the wheels fall off!

    • @joeljimenez1929
      @joeljimenez1929 Год назад

      How much and how many miles? Where at?? Looking rn lol

    • @williamyoon
      @williamyoon Год назад

      @@joeljimenez1929if you’re still looking, make sure that the seller replaced the vvti gear and radio at least, those two things are basically guaranteed to fail judging by everyone else’s experience with this specific car. (and mine)

    • @benslawnservice
      @benslawnservice Год назад +4

      I lived at home with my parents until I was 26 so I could jumpstart my investments. I now have a house and all my cars are paid for. I also have more in retirement and investments than I owe on my house so I’m way ahead of most people my age that are still renting and struggling.

    • @p.capes1
      @p.capes1 Год назад +1

      How did you built wealth?

  • @stevens1041
    @stevens1041 Год назад +214

    My best friend in University told me why you should drive a PoS car. According to him "if your cheap car gets wrecked, you can go out and buy another cheap car the same day, no problem". I laughed so hard, but it really is liberating owning a cheap car to just use and enjoy. Maintain the mechanics of it, obviously, but otherwise, a car is a tool, not a status symbol.

    • @oneobserver6116
      @oneobserver6116 Год назад +11

      You make some good points, but for a lot of people, a car is a status symbol. I'm not saying it should be that way,but for a lot of people, it is. Car manufacturers know this and they make a fortune on it.

    • @marvin2678
      @marvin2678 Год назад +2

      @@oneobserver6116 yep excatly

    • @oneobserver6116
      @oneobserver6116 Год назад

      @r1oot You're right,it does hurt,but I would like to give you some advice. My first car was a ragged out '73 Chevy Vega. Over the years, I have owned cars and trucks that were great,but I never forgot my first one. Whenever I see someone driving a clunker, I remember that Vega. It keeps me humble and grateful for what I now have. As for the people that are giving you a hard time,it shows a lack of class and a lack of character on their part. Later on,when you get a better car, you won't be a jerk like the losers that are giving you a hard time. You will be understanding to those that don't have nice as you will have. Even now,by reacting with class and maturity, you will show the character that your co-workers sorely lack.

    • @producer.james1
      @producer.james1 Год назад +2

      @@r1oot Toyota Echos are great little cars! Amazing fuel pinchers today with these prices. Knew a guy who drove one from new to 800,000 kms.

    • @wturner777
      @wturner777 11 месяцев назад

      Not to mention you'd save a lot of money in insurance because all you're paying is the required liability.

  • @Christensen554
    @Christensen554 21 день назад +57

    I consider myself to be along term thinker, I drive a Chevrolet Malibu and that's more than enough for me. Investing has been rather rewarding to me and I've learned that getting a good return is very much attainable if you know your way around it.

    • @Christensen554
      @Christensen554 21 день назад +2

      Luck is way off the picture. Jonas Herman, a licensed fiduciary is the brain behind my success. I've gotten into a plethora of assets with $19k spread across stocks (options and futures) for the short term and Roth IRA, index funds, cryptocurrency and ETFs, for the long term. Now with over 91k in roi, I sit back and just reinvest at intervals while I handle my other businesses.

    • @Rmorales799
      @Rmorales799 21 день назад +2

      To me, investing is not worth it and I know that's the same mindset holding me back from taking a step forward in my finance. It’s all gambling.

    • @Christensen554
      @Christensen554 21 день назад +2

      Hermanw jonas that’s his gmail okay

    • @Brunhild386
      @Brunhild386 18 дней назад +1

      Early in my career, I wanted to grow my savings but was overwhelmed by the sheer number of investment options. Herman took the time to understand my risk tolerance, financial goals, and timeline. He didn’t push products but instead created a diversified portfolio tailored to me, helping me invest in index funds, bonds, and a few specific stocks for long-term growth.

    • @aaleeksii
      @aaleeksii 17 дней назад

      jesus these bots are everywhere

  • @tangiblebear5309
    @tangiblebear5309 Год назад +223

    I drive a 1998 oldsmobile. Got it free. $500 a year for insurance. My head liner also sags. I'm very grateful to God for everything. Thank u Simon

    • @bigdapramirez6157
      @bigdapramirez6157 2 месяца назад +4

      I have a civic that's in decent shape. Bought it myself and mine also sags but I like to joke about it with my girlfriend because it's more funny than annoying 😂

    • @hakeemsd70m
      @hakeemsd70m Месяц назад +1

      How did you get a free car?? Do share!

    • @justinallport8742
      @justinallport8742 Месяц назад +4

      Walmart has little cork screws, with clear plastic flowers other end. Those will hold your headliner up and prevent it from sagging"

    • @tangiblebear5309
      @tangiblebear5309 Месяц назад

      @@justinallport8742 I use thumb tacks!

    • @phillies4eva
      @phillies4eva 14 дней назад +1

      I drive a 87 Volvo. There’s no headliner. It’s a superior plastic liner. My insurance is stupidly expensive in Florida though.

  • @LillyAnnHouston
    @LillyAnnHouston Год назад +180

    I drove 1hr 15 mins to work each way 3rd shift. All in a beater. 2 beaters for 20 years. Now retired at 45. My 1st beater was still running over 268,000 miles but gave it to my niece (she still has it). Both cars (Toyota) never left me stranded. I choose retirement over luxury.

    • @kensmith2796
      @kensmith2796 Год назад +8

      Retired at 45? How? You should start a channel on it.

    • @user-jy7yw5kw3w
      @user-jy7yw5kw3w Год назад +15

      @@kensmith2796 probably by not having a car payment and investing. The average car payment on a new car is $700 a month. If he invested that every month into a fund like VTSAX, VOO, VTI, ect (US market funds) if he did that from age 18 to 45 the average market returns 10% a year he would have over a million dollars sitting in his brokerage account.

    • @BrettMKW
      @BrettMKW Год назад +6

      @@kensmith2796 I believe it. I'm 28 and just bought my 3rd car, have spent less than 15k combined for all of them, never once had a car payment. Only reason I'm on car 3 is because car 2 got totaled last November and only had 110k on it, planned on having that one for a while but that's life.
      If you get yourself a well paying job, live frugally when you can, start young, and invest early I can definitely see someone retiring at 45.

    • @ya-boyrookus7516
      @ya-boyrookus7516 Год назад +6

      @@user-jy7yw5kw3w what about health insurance?

    • @uploadtime1780
      @uploadtime1780 Год назад

      ​@@ya-boyrookus7516 that's what people who haven't had large medical expenses don't think about.

  • @johntorres5346
    @johntorres5346 Год назад +261

    I’m a car salesman and I completely agree with this man, I myself drive a 04 pathfinder thats paid off (obviously) 😂. Don’t waist your money on things you CANT afford

    • @jerrylisby3440
      @jerrylisby3440 Год назад +30

      Waste. Yes don't waist your money either on too much food going to the waist. Hahaha

    • @tylerdurden5122
      @tylerdurden5122 Год назад +6

      @@jerrylisby3440 I like what you did there

    • @boristheamerican2938
      @boristheamerican2938 Год назад +5

      If you are a car salesmen you drive a demo.

    • @bloatedsodium7301
      @bloatedsodium7301 Год назад +1

      Is it possible to have a car dealership where there’s a set commission for all salespeople?

    • @stormblade1199
      @stormblade1199 Год назад +5

      ​@@boristheamerican2938 This guy is a car salesman telling you what he drives and you're telling him what he should be driving😂 what

  • @stankent7862
    @stankent7862 Год назад +34

    My last car payment was in 2002. I sold the truck, and drove a $500 ranger 75 miles to work. Never broke down. It was low mileage but, baby blue and a pink stripe. Saved the car payment I would have been paying every month. Paid cash for a 10 year old Lexus for my wife. Continued to put the would be car payment in savings each month. Every three years we upgrade. I now have a 2021 f250 and my wife has an RX350. No payments.

  • @Tim85-y2q
    @Tim85-y2q Год назад +243

    Personally, I think there's a middle ground on this one. Obviously, it's a bad idea to spend money you don't have on a car that's fancier than what you need, but I know some people who always went for an absolute beater just to save a buck and ended up spending far more because they didn't have a reliable vehicle. A solid, dependable car or truck is a sound investment because most people need one in order to function, but that should be within and against the parameters of what's sensible for your personal finances.

    • @Ottobot2
      @Ottobot2 Год назад +43

      Buy for function and purpose within your budget. This works for any purchase in life.

    • @Tim85-y2q
      @Tim85-y2q Год назад +12

      @@Ottobot2 Exactly. IMHO the ideal move here is to go for the most cost-effective vehicle that will be able to safely and reliably do what you need it to do and if you have to finance, go for something that will (hopefully) have a lot of life left in it once you are done making the payments.

    • @Drakkarius
      @Drakkarius Год назад +18

      Yup happened to me, I spent so much money on the old car, then i decided to buy a new car(the most cheap one). I should have done from the beginning, thousands of dollars wasted. Old cars are only good for people that now how to fix stuff themselves and know enough to get a car in good conditions.

    • @leonzhu1301
      @leonzhu1301 Год назад +4

      And the sweet spot is different for everybody. My car is great for my use cases, but if I move to a new city / new residence, my use cases will change and I'll need something else.

    • @rolandthethompsongunner64
      @rolandthethompsongunner64 Год назад +6

      I can pull practically any recently junked car out of the scrap yard and make it reliable for usually less than a grand. Depends on the vehicle of course.

  • @yankeegonesouth4973
    @yankeegonesouth4973 Год назад +152

    I have driven 15-20 year old Toyotas for years. I'm totally on board with this guy.
    Also, the gentleman who wrote about only being able to use the car breakdown excuse a couple times has obviously never lived in Pennsylvania. A coworker split his axle on a highway in rush hour traffic. The potholes are that real. That may have been extreme, but Potholevanians can relate.

    • @SlumberBear2k
      @SlumberBear2k Год назад +4

      And I thought it was just known for the rocks! on the appalachian trail it is so notorious for the rocks it is called "Rocksylvania"

    • @blueprince2330
      @blueprince2330 Год назад +4

      I also live in Pennsylvania. The threat is real.

    • @BRIANDER100
      @BRIANDER100 Год назад

      besides routine repair charges, how much did you spend on repairs ?

    • @yankeegonesouth4973
      @yankeegonesouth4973 Год назад +1

      @@BRIANDER100 I guess it depends what you count as routine. The main thing has been tires and every few years. The non routine costs like brakes, radiator or exhaust issues are rare, like 1 in 10 years for each. We budget $1000/year for maintenance + repairs and then have emergency funds if needed. Just going off the top of my head, most years we spend $800-1200 to keep 1 vehicle running (that's everything but gas). A bad year might be closer to $1800, but that is maybe 1 in 5 years, and a sign it's time to trade in for the new 15 year old model.

    • @maoduida387
      @maoduida387 Год назад

      Pot holes? bad roads? Hoods and shootings? Did someone say new ken!?!? my car got hit in the 400 11th street shooting and I almost got to use a rare excuse, that being that the police have my car for evidence, thankfully didnt have work that day.

  • @matthewolson9704
    @matthewolson9704 Год назад +54

    I'm a mechanic, and driving a POS isn't a concern. I've spent most of my adult life driving cash cars that were varying degress of "shitbox" and decided to buy my first new car a little over a year ago (at age 36). I agree that the cost and the worry about door dings aren't ideal, but as a "car guy" I got tired of fixing everyone else's cars day in and day out to drive a car that doesn't bring me any happiness. Sometimes you gotta go for it 🤷🏻‍♂️ I try to balance saving money and living within my means and full YOLO #sendit

    • @dingdong2103
      @dingdong2103 Год назад +2

      For me having my employer lease me a new Mercedes is the sweet spot

    • @zeppkfw
      @zeppkfw Год назад +1

      Definitely. There are plenty of cars that are reliable, good value, make decent to good power, low maintenance, cheap to maintain, etc... Ones that are actually good investments but noy too crazy. Examples I can think of are genesis coupes 3.8s, BRZ/FRS, miatas, G37S, Q50S 3.7 (modded), etc...
      These cars can be bought with 50-80k miles for around 15-20k only. Insurance shouldn't be too crazy nor is the maintenance. Gas will be a bit more since some are V6s but N/A V6s are reliably quick enough and can even beat stock scatpacks/ R/Ts.

    • @jaycarter2x
      @jaycarter2x Год назад +2

      Lmao I got tired of driving bs too except i’m 21😂joined the Army at 18 and went on deployments to the Middle east and Germany to finally afford my 2.0t Accord🏆

    • @zeppkfw
      @zeppkfw Год назад

      @@jaycarter2xyou didn't buy a mustang or a charger so that's a huge win!

  • @LittleMopeHead
    @LittleMopeHead Год назад +22

    This video's message is a classic. I bought a '97 Lexus ES 300 w/ 151K miles for $5.5K in 2006 for college. While owning it, I did regular maintenance to it myself. The most I did was changed lower tie bar suspension and brake calipers, rotors, and pads. Over the years, I had an accident (other driver's fault), and her insurance paid me $1900 for the front driver-side damage. I basically hammered it back in, bought a new headlight for $125, and continued driving it just fine. I was debt-free since 2019 (from $45K student loans), make over $100K now, and just this spring 2023, I sold the car for $1000. It had 325K miles on it and started up every single time. There are more important things in my life, and driving a new car to impress others is not one of them.

    • @_m_K_.
      @_m_K_. Год назад +1

      I had a 96 es300, bought in 2006 for 5500 from a dealer. I owned it 10 years put about 110k on, it was totaled when parked and i got a 3k check. It was 248k miles and still running fine, but the valve covers leaked like crazy.

    • @LittleMopeHead
      @LittleMopeHead Год назад +1

      @@_m_K_. That's incredible! Way to go!

    • @jackz4149
      @jackz4149 Год назад

      Yeah, in 2021 when I bought my new car in college, I chose gls580 over cayenne turbo due to lower price, good choice, very reliable car, I can see myself getting headaches in a nicer car over the payment and insurance

    • @mariomedinaofficial
      @mariomedinaofficial 11 месяцев назад

      Happy for you

    • @noble20xx56
      @noble20xx56 10 месяцев назад

      Ayyye the Es300. Very chill ride.

  • @joekelley5121
    @joekelley5121 Год назад +244

    A lot of people put a lot of street cred into a vehicle. Musk has said: "drive a 5 thousand dollar car and have 100 thousand in the bank". It's something to strive for.

    • @TBlock1347
      @TBlock1347 Год назад +42

      And he sells 50k plus cars. Oh the irony.

    • @DatBoiLui
      @DatBoiLui Год назад +24

      ​@TBlock1347 mhmm not really, he sells a product to the cookie cutter population, but the advice he gave was for people who want to be financially free

    • @joekelley5121
      @joekelley5121 Год назад +8

      @@TBlock1347 sure he does, but in order to get to that point, you have to crawl before you can walk, and then run. That's how people stay poor. If you're not making 6 figures, don't blow the money you DO make on an expensive car that you can't afford. I've got the 5,000 dollar car, and no debt. I've been able to replace things in the house like the furnace, the water heater and the refrigerator because I had a 5000.00 car that was paid off, and stashed the 350.00 to 400.00 car payment back just for those issues. Poor people stay poor because they use credit they can't afford.

    • @coleworldcole9438
      @coleworldcole9438 Год назад

      Hey boss life 😂😂

    • @christianjon8064
      @christianjon8064 Год назад +1

      Have it in crypto tho so the govt can’t take it

  • @DePalma.
    @DePalma. Год назад +186

    My folks drove old vehicles when I was young, I drive an old vehicle.
    No debt, money in the bank, affordable mortgage.
    He’s right.

    • @georgevue8175
      @georgevue8175 Год назад +5

      I'd like to buy a new SUV but even a smallish SUV is $35,000 with next to zero options.

    • @DePalma.
      @DePalma. Год назад +1

      @Mike Mike I don’t know of a much better place to put my money in the bank, maybe under my mattress… I don’t know anywhere that I can gain interest safely

    • @varmastiko2908
      @varmastiko2908 Год назад +1

      @Mike Mike Depreciation on that car will be far more than the amount of inflation. Instead, only drive cars that don't depreciate anymore and invest all your savings. You will still never get rich but you will have something left of what you earned even after many years.

    • @varmastiko2908
      @varmastiko2908 Год назад +1

      @@DePalma. You don't really gain interest. But possessing money you will always "gain" negative interest (inflation). So just having money sit somewhere is dumb. You're simply throwing it away. Now of course investing has risks. But if you don't invest then your money is already gone.

    • @joesolo7719
      @joesolo7719 Год назад +1

      @Mike Mike cool story

  • @davidmanning6321
    @davidmanning6321 Год назад +393

    “If you want to be rich you need to drive a POS…period”. Best quote in a long time!

    • @Lumpia_In_Texas
      @Lumpia_In_Texas Год назад

      Or
      You can be a POS like a Biden and be rich.

    • @brandons772
      @brandons772 Год назад +25

      I drive a POS, still not rich.

    • @andersonandrew112
      @andersonandrew112 Год назад +27

      ​@Brandon S and you won't be. Cutting expenses is one part of the equation but the income and investment side is even more important. I know a ton of poor people driving crappy cars who won't become millionaires that way

    • @mikerodix4800
      @mikerodix4800 Год назад +13

      If you can stop working and fix your pos you aren't getting rich anyway because you can make more money at work than you can save in your driveway if you are in the right line of work

    • @dand3975
      @dand3975 Год назад

      Stay at Home on your time off work and fix your p.o.s.

  • @Sideler74
    @Sideler74 Год назад +9

    Do the regular maintenance on your car/truck. It'll run forever

    • @Commentleaver-c6x
      @Commentleaver-c6x Месяц назад

      No, unfortunately no vehicle lasts forever no matter how well it’s maintained.

  • @coldspring22
    @coldspring22 Год назад +168

    Totally agree! I bought a used car 20 years ago for $1000. It's still worth $1000 today. Unlike new cars which lose tremendous value, beaters don't lose money to devaluation as long as it's in running condition. Another big bonus is that older cars are simpler, much easier for DIY repair saving lots of money.

    • @V8Brah
      @V8Brah Год назад +6

      My IS500 costed $62,000 last year and I can sell it for $68,000 today. I don't follow your logic. :D

    • @andrei666
      @andrei666 Год назад +17

      @@V8Brah Its a different story bruh. Inflation, deficit and etc, no market equilibrium anymore. Thats why its what you get

    • @Argedis
      @Argedis Год назад +24

      @@V8Brah Don't act like you don't know we're in a car bubble.
      Also the expensive monthly insurance you're paying is eating away any 'profit' you could make.
      You're probably not even adding the taxes you paid and already lost.

    • @hbkkidcorrupt
      @hbkkidcorrupt Год назад +18

      @@V8Brah lol go sell it then.Good luck getting 68k

    • @V8Brah
      @V8Brah Год назад

      ​@@Argedis Yeah true. Insurance, tax, and registration is expensive.

  • @winstonmiu
    @winstonmiu Год назад +108

    I always thought about what it would be like to get my dream car, but the stress of fuel, insurance, maintenance, and general worry of damage on top of the initial high purchasing price make me think twice about it. The carefreeness of driving a beater is the luxury.

    • @samuelroselli138
      @samuelroselli138 Год назад +9

      100%
      When someone T-bones your 1,200 dollar car with 200k it’s mostly an annoyance because you need another car, not a financial catastrophe.

    • @GTStuning-
      @GTStuning- Год назад +6

      I purchased my dream car a few years ago and he is exactly right about many points.
      The nervousness related to parking it at a store lot or leaving it in a lot for 8+ hours when at work, that hits home.
      I drive it maybe 5 or 6 times a month and am never relaxed when trying to enjoy a calm cruise in it.
      I'm hoping the more I drive it, the more I will enjoy it, but I find new road related scratches/chips on it after a long drive. That aspect makes it tricky to enjoy as it's in such pristine condition and each drive has the potential of causing new paint chips....learning to let go of that constant worry.
      My daily driver is a 99 GMC Sierra and it has been dented and mildly scraped up against, yet I have no worries as it's getting rusty anyways.
      Sure it's old but insurance on it is disgustingly cheap and I don't owe anything on it.

    • @winstonmiu
      @winstonmiu Год назад

      I’m a huge sucker for manuals and tend to like smaller + simpler cars anyway. I’m not a fast driver but I derive so much pleasure from tooling around in a manual compact beater.

    • @Three_Days_Of_Solitude
      @Three_Days_Of_Solitude Год назад

      I own a Mustang 2015 GT 50 years edition which is my garageQueen. My daily/weekend is a 1999 Citron Xantia which I fixed up myself. Low insurance and ok mileage

    • @tanyaflanders2196
      @tanyaflanders2196 Год назад

      Totally agree with this.

  • @MatthewDragos-kg7js
    @MatthewDragos-kg7js Год назад +179

    I’m someone who for the foreseeable future, plans on experiencing a different car every 3-4 yrs. And I’ll be the first to say that a lot more videos like this one are desperately needed. The amount of people who have negative equity because they want to be perceived as successful by driving a certain car is absurd. A lot of things to blame for this but ultimately it’s a lack of self control & abysmal priorities. I’m a car guy who can easily drive past a beater & barely bat an eye because odds are, that person is smarter than me.

    • @Argedis
      @Argedis Год назад +33

      That's exactly how I think. When I see people driving older Toyota's like mine I know they're smart people.
      Also if you drive around low income neighborhoods you tend to see a lot of new cars in the driveway compared to more older cars in higher income neighborhoods. People stay broke by living like they're rich.

    • @jaimereyes4157
      @jaimereyes4157 Год назад +1

      lol

    • @baronrichmond5667
      @baronrichmond5667 Год назад +14

      I agree to an extent.... beaters are more prone to breakdowns. I think a decent car at a good used price is the best way to go...not a beater.

    • @Rhye7767
      @Rhye7767 Год назад

      I wouldn’t say that necessarily, a lot more people struggle than you think

    • @Argedis
      @Argedis Год назад +4

      @@Rhye7767 The people that struggle are the ones buying new cars to keep up with the Joneses and can barely keep up with the payments.

  • @MySteamChannel
    @MySteamChannel Год назад +10

    My car is 20 yrs old & never let me down. I am financially free in retirement.

  • @ChrisfromGeorgia
    @ChrisfromGeorgia Год назад +135

    It’s not what you drive, it’s how you arrive!
    Beater Life✊🏻💯

    • @mathisnotforthefaintofheart
      @mathisnotforthefaintofheart Год назад +1

      Does safety play any role here?

    • @redbluesome2829
      @redbluesome2829 Год назад +8

      Why do people always assume a car that isn’t brand new wasn’t developed with passenger safety in mind? Cars don’t change as quickly as they once did, and at this point, even a twenty year old car is still thoroughly modern. That’s a 2003 model for those bad with math. Nobody needs Apple CarPlay, etc.
      Airbags (sometimes more than two), ABS brakes, crumple zones, safety cell, everything meeting or exceeding federal standards at time of manufacture… Your family would be plenty safe in a 1996 Mercedes S-Class for example.

    • @mathisnotforthefaintofheart
      @mathisnotforthefaintofheart Год назад

      @@redbluesome2829 That's true. An Anvalon, or Benz S class and the likes of 2000's is certainly safe. A Civic back then compared to modern standards? Not so. You are right, model does matter

    • @Argedis
      @Argedis Год назад

      @@mathisnotforthefaintofheart Physics always wins so you can drive a modern Civic and crash into a 20yr old Suburban and still lose.

    • @jdean4268
      @jdean4268 Год назад

      I like it! good one, but shouldn't it be " it's that you arrive" LOL

  • @coldcloakmusic6630
    @coldcloakmusic6630 Год назад +10

    I drive a car that has roll down windows….my coworkers laughed at me but I don’t have a car payment and they bought cars they can’t afford anymore

  • @chadbeimer3363
    @chadbeimer3363 Год назад +20

    A well maintained vehicle can be very reliable, even if it is old...

    • @louisaugust1815
      @louisaugust1815 2 месяца назад +2

      totally agree

    • @popisolation
      @popisolation 8 дней назад

      Almost every vehicle in the world is reliable if you keep up with maintenance and repairs when they break.

  • @thomasbuck303
    @thomasbuck303 Год назад +2

    Having a monthly car payment is the most unnecessary money drain people put in their life. People say they can't afford a house in this day and age, but they'll spend $1500 a month on a car payment and $1000 a month on eating out/entertainment. 🤔

  • @stewey2298
    @stewey2298 Год назад +51

    I once had a roomate who decided he wanted a nice 34 or 36K dollar car. It was very nice. But once he got it, the apartment complex we were in had him stressing every day because it was not a nice area, and he had one of the better cars in the lot. So he decided to rent a house instead, and ended up paying triple his share of the rent to move to a better area away from crime. So the price of that car ended up being very very high. He was a high earner, but also stretched himself very thin on his cost of living.

    • @seventheleven
      @seventheleven Год назад +3

      Ouch! No point in earning the big bucks if you cant sock some away for the future

    • @lakaiskates8064
      @lakaiskates8064 Год назад +12

      Got a nice car and moved out of the ghetto? Sounds like a win-win to me

    • @hankhill3417
      @hankhill3417 Год назад

      Typical

    • @clickbaitpolice1750
      @clickbaitpolice1750 Год назад +1

      @@lakaiskates8064 he’s gonna retire later tho

    • @arsenal4444
      @arsenal4444 Год назад +1

      @@lakaiskates8064 lenders and car salespeople love your attitude

  • @SkylerF
    @SkylerF Год назад +184

    My ride has 300K miles on it, and still running! I'm very grateful to have bought it from my parents for $400 when I graduated high school in 2016 and I'm gonna drive it into the ground!!!

    • @tonymnemonic7366
      @tonymnemonic7366 Год назад +27

      When you drive it into the ground you then buy a rebuilt motor and get another 150-200k on it.

    • @bradmiller6507
      @bradmiller6507 Год назад +13

      So, it’s almost broken in. Keep driving it!

    • @timferguson593
      @timferguson593 Год назад +6

      Smart. Don’t buy!

    • @hereweare9011
      @hereweare9011 Год назад +5

      What are you driving?

    • @ananda_miaoyin
      @ananda_miaoyin Год назад +9

      I drive a 97 Celica 5 speed with 298K on it. Paid 1000 dollars for it 6 years ago.
      I do have a new Subaru as well for the snow and sometimes you just want a change of pace....
      I retired at 45; independently wealthy.
      This is the Way.

  • @charlesben9104
    @charlesben9104 Год назад +13

    Ever notice how you work to pay for a house you just end up sleeping in at the end of the day to rest and get up the next day to also pay for the car that gets you to that job?

  • @tom23245
    @tom23245 Месяц назад +2

    It doesn't take a $80k car to be comfortable in long commutes. Heck, you don't even need $50k. You can buy a 2020 Lexus GX460 for $35k. Older model years are even cheaper. If you somehow have less than $10k to spend on a car, then get your lifestyle in check and start saving. Take the bus, ride an ebike, carpool with friends, etc. until you can save up for a decent car of your own.

  • @2muchtime579
    @2muchtime579 Год назад +22

    This is true especially for men. I have seen so many of my friends go broke simply because of cars. Being content with a reliable cheap car is the way to go!

  • @smille12
    @smille12 Год назад +26

    I used to drive 2 to 1/2 hours a day back and forth to work, found a job 15 minutes away , it was an instant raise saving gas and wear an tear, biggest raise was getting my time back for myself driving less, your time is priceless

    • @Argedis
      @Argedis Год назад +3

      Correct. Time is the only thing money can't buy. You can only spend more to 'save' more time.

    • @HomeGrownPyro1
      @HomeGrownPyro1 Год назад +2

      Same here. Been doing the drive for almost 20 years and am soooooooooooo sick and tired of it. In todays world it just isn’t worth it with the price of gas, the price of vehicles and the depreciation you experience every single day you commute to work.
      It just sucks because I live within walking distance to 3 local hospitals but haven’t been able to get a job at either of them yet. So it’s either so the commute and work in the field you went to school for or say f*ck it and take a significant less paying job doing something else

    • @juvawaveredlighttherapy
      @juvawaveredlighttherapy 14 дней назад +1

      Time is money

  • @ethanlaughlin9303
    @ethanlaughlin9303 Год назад +42

    100% agree. I drive a 2000 toyota camry. I'm working on building my wealth and being able to do whatever I want in life when I reach financial independence. I could care less what anyone thinks of what I drive.

    • @davidzoller9617
      @davidzoller9617 Год назад +6

      Camry (pre 2007) in my opinion is one of the top choices. You will get a very decent and reliable ride coming with one of the longest lasting engines around. Smart choice.

    • @briank5877
      @briank5877 Год назад +1

      Awesome man your truly not free if you have debt

    • @inertiaforce7846
      @inertiaforce7846 Год назад +1

      99 Camry here.

    • @charliesanchez6094
      @charliesanchez6094 Год назад

      Great cars older camrys

    • @hankhill3417
      @hankhill3417 Год назад

      Yep

  • @andrewschrim6676
    @andrewschrim6676 7 часов назад +1

    It would be ok if the new car dealers nowadays were willing and able to give you your money's worth ,but alas most are not.

  • @albertapeet
    @albertapeet Год назад +9

    I’m 60. Been driving pos used all my life. Still broke 😂

  • @1labrinth
    @1labrinth Год назад +33

    I went golfing with two guys that both had a yearly salary invested in new trucks. There was a hail storm and every car got dented all over. I could justifyingly see the pain in their eyes when we got back to the parking lot. Cars are going to get scratches, dings, dents.

    • @edwardeighth1948
      @edwardeighth1948 Год назад +2

      No insurance?

    • @happydays454
      @happydays454 Год назад +2

      Imagine the insurance checks that's a dream come true 😂

    • @buckfifty-two-thousand8640
      @buckfifty-two-thousand8640 Год назад

      Time to find a different room

    • @admiralrustyshackleford119
      @admiralrustyshackleford119 Год назад +3

      Back in 2014 a tornado picked up my neighbors garage and basically flipped it on top of my 1986 F150. After an afternoon of cutting away the biggest chunks of the rubble with a sawzall I drove the truck out from under the pile basically looking the same as it did before having a building thrown at it... Not saying it was a cherry truck before hand, but it didn't even break any glass or smash the roof in or anything. That neighbor had a fairly new dodge ram and a Toyota minivan in the garage, and they both looked like someone beat the absolute hell out of them with a sledgehammer.
      I still own that F150. Nobody builds a real truck anymore.

    • @danieldaniels7571
      @danieldaniels7571 Год назад +1

      I drive an old Saturn. It doesn’t dent. It has a plastic body. Hail bounces off of it.

  • @wesleyhurd3574
    @wesleyhurd3574 Год назад +23

    In regard to buying new: "I want the car. I don't want the stress of the car." Very relatable

  • @nosaj3856
    @nosaj3856 Год назад +3

    One of the most liberating things you can do is move to an area where no one cares about how you dress or what you drive. Financially, I am well off, but living in wealthy areas of NY and NJ for years and then moving to Central PA was a eye opener. No one cares what you have or drive out here. No one tries to impress anyone. If anything you stand out in a bad way for driving something too nice.

    • @james1787
      @james1787 4 месяца назад +3

      I live in one of those wealthy areas in NY and NJ and we stand out for driving a 22 year old minivan. The high school seniors drive stuff much nicer than us! I kind of laugh at that - but I love the financial peace that we have. I'll ocasionally catch bits of conversations with friends / neighbors who do drive the new cars and carry all the debt and it's reasurrance that we made some sacrifices and lived below our means but not having that stress is so worth it.

    • @nosaj3856
      @nosaj3856 4 месяца назад +3

      @james1787 I still own a service business in NY. There are many big homes that we go to where they have 4 85k plus cars in the driveway of a mcmansion with no furniture inside and they can barely keep up the maintenance of the homes.

  • @Cotherman_Co
    @Cotherman_Co Год назад +8

    Lol a boomer wrote that letter. They mentioned a new Buick. Ah ha ha

  • @LateNightCable
    @LateNightCable Год назад +24

    I drive a 24 year old Miata daily. I wouldn’t consider it a POS by any means because it’s fun and very reliable. But it’s in decent project condition cosmetically. I really love it, because not only is it thrifty to own, but it’s also something I can look forward to making better in the future and being really proud to show.

  • @mbjasondify
    @mbjasondify Год назад +33

    If you are mechanically inclined, 15 to 20 year old vehicles are easier to work on due to their design, parts are abundant and cheaper. They are also abundant due to the majority of people love getting into NEW vehicles. Another point, driving used or even vintage cars are a supreme act of recycling. The carbon footprint of new vehicle production is astounding.

    • @robertm5969
      @robertm5969 Год назад +4

      This is especially true for high volume cars. We have a 17yr old honda and 17yr old Infiniti. The Honda parts are a fraction of the Infiniti parts. I've been buying them all from rockauto lately

    • @mikeprice8307
      @mikeprice8307 Год назад

      Not pontiac gto 04-06 everything is becoming discontinued

    • @clickbaitpolice1750
      @clickbaitpolice1750 Год назад

      I’m thinking of getting a 2009 Volvo S60 AWD for $4k. Anyone have any opinions on it?

    • @ASEmastermechanic
      @ASEmastermechanic Год назад

      Great point.

    • @austinjames3525
      @austinjames3525 Год назад +1

      I own two mid 90s GMC trucks and a 2012 Nissan Altima, and your comment is the truth! The trucks are my mess around vehicles and the Nissan is my daily. I paid 1000 bucks for the Nissan and it was the best purchase I’ve made. I’ve put 10k miles on it and haven’t spent a dime on anything besides gas. I like working on vehicles so I spend more than I should on the trucks, but overall it’s so cheap compared to something new and the maintenance on something new.

  • @MustyBastard
    @MustyBastard Год назад +158

    it doesn't have to be a pos. Just something you can pay cash for.

    • @josephliptak3183
      @josephliptak3183 Год назад +13

      Exactly 💯

    • @humzilla707
      @humzilla707 Год назад +6

      Or low interest. I paid 1.9% so I'm keeping that money when I could have paid for it

    • @MustyBastard
      @MustyBastard Год назад

      @@humzilla707 Your life. I am all about reducing how much I need to make every month to survive and reducing the amount of things that hit my bank account. If I do not want to work for a few months, I can. Just as long as all my passive side hustles keep cfing. Free time while I am young is my greatest asset. I am not interested in accumulating large amounts of FIAT, Ill never get the chance to enjoy

    • @briank5877
      @briank5877 Год назад

      Good point

    • @briank5877
      @briank5877 Год назад +1

      @@humzilla707 you can use that money and buy CDs that yield over 5%. Hence your being the bank now.

  • @francefradetjardineslacora8114
    @francefradetjardineslacora8114 27 дней назад +5

    Peace of mind is PURE LUXURY. It is PRICELESS. My French dad said those who live hidden live happy. He meant, don't show your wealth. Money is invested in the home and the education of the children. Not on outward things.

  • @tattoodestroyer1663
    @tattoodestroyer1663 Год назад +161

    I drove a $500 jeep for 7 years. Saved $400 a month that entire time.

    • @stevecooper7883
      @stevecooper7883 Год назад +53

      ​@Dot Com but he ain't in debt.

    • @maryjanegreen7601
      @maryjanegreen7601 Год назад +4

      I just had work done on my 2012 Fiesta (a gift from my daughter). It made me miss my 70s/80s $500 (one was $150) car I could work on myself.

    • @Daniellihomes
      @Daniellihomes Год назад +10

      @Dot Com Drove a pos rav4 for 6+ years while all my friends bought new vehicles, guess who is pretty much retired at 38 LMAO your point is moot at best

    • @risefast184
      @risefast184 Год назад

      @dotcom721 if he put 400$ every month for 7 years in bitcoin he is rich lol

    • @tattoodestroyer1663
      @tattoodestroyer1663 Год назад +3

      @lowda9 yeah I got a Jeep with the 4.0 engine in it. Those things never die.

  • @SW20FL
    @SW20FL Год назад +18

    *Our current society would spend $$$ on literally anything except taking care of what they own.*

    • @rayhill5767
      @rayhill5767 Год назад +1

      Generations of tv watchers
      Let’s watch the superbowl for the advertisements. Wheee!

  • @christianwc9458
    @christianwc9458 Месяц назад +8

    "I want the car, I don't want the stress of the car" - ringing so true! Couldn't agree more.

  • @christopherjacoby4089
    @christopherjacoby4089 Год назад +168

    If your young and really trying to come up this advice will save your entire future. I’m 28 and drive the same car I bought when I was 22 for 4 grand, live with my parents, and look like a complete bum on the outside. But over my 20s I’ve amassed a almost 200k in investments and savings and have a 780 credit score. Still want a new car but i chose to live by the same principal that got me here in the first place. I’ll probably move out soon, but idk. Living a stress free life has its perks.

    • @mmp495
      @mmp495 Год назад +5

      You are doing amazing!

    • @mikeprice8307
      @mikeprice8307 Год назад +29

      Damn dawg 28 and still with your parents ? I'd be ashamed to even tell that! You must not date any either 😅

    • @ronijr4918
      @ronijr4918 Год назад +11

      Good that you have all that money hut still living with mom and dad? Hmm.

    • @christopherjacoby4089
      @christopherjacoby4089 Год назад

      @@mikeprice8307 you’d be surprised, a lot of girls like it, because the guys they date have 50k cars but can only afford to take them to Olive Garden, and then back to their apartment, with a bed on the floor and one chair in front of the tv.

    • @christopherjacoby4089
      @christopherjacoby4089 Год назад

      @@ronijr4918 it’s called a life hack.

  • @mikesweet5848
    @mikesweet5848 Год назад +61

    Couldn't agree more. I drive an '03 Yukon XL Denali, and although I have the benefit of being a master technician, I've said I wouldn't buy anything new until I'm worth around $10M. That future net worth is spoken for by way of reinvesting in my businesses, nicer home furnishings like you mentioned, growing my personal real estate portfolio and absolutely I'd buy a vacation home long before a new vehicle.
    I originally paid $1000 for this truck and this year alone it's gone from CO-> NY, CO -> UT and WY, down to NM, and a few dozen day trips to the mountains in Colorado.

    • @deeeeeeps
      @deeeeeeps Год назад +1

      Yup I just posted the same thing 2002 tahoe...Amazing reliability

    • @ek6667
      @ek6667 Год назад +1

      I have 03 Denali, Love the truck drives like high end truck on my new Magnetic suspension

    • @mikesweet5848
      @mikesweet5848 Год назад

      @@ek6667 Yeah I mean it's insanely comfortable. Everyone who rides in it loves it. The only thing it's missing is tech, which is a plus for me.

    • @mikesweet5848
      @mikesweet5848 Год назад

      ​@@LG-bn9gu If you have the opportunity to sell a car for a profit, sure. Chances are, in those unique circumstances where you can pull that off, you'll turn around and overpay for a replacement.
      My vehicle is fully depreciated. Throughout history new vehicles have only depreciated, and not appreciated with the exception of collector vehicles. Any exception outside of collector vehicles is an extreme irregularity.

    • @BrettBeeching
      @BrettBeeching Год назад +2

      The 2000-2006 GM trucks are awesome. I'm not a technician, but I can maintain my 2003 Tahoe myself because parts are widely available and there's a RUclips video or forum discussion about almost anything that could go wrong.

  • @leo959
    @leo959 Год назад +89

    “In loneliness, the lonely one eats himself. In a crowd, the many eat him. Now choose” ~ Friedrich Nietzsche

    • @drmodestoesq
      @drmodestoesq Год назад +4

      And in Nietzsche's case syphilis spirochetes ate his brain.

    • @leo959
      @leo959 Год назад

      @@drmodestoesq they didn’t have the technology we’re currently have today as a whole. He was ahead of his time.

    • @rogersmith7396
      @rogersmith7396 Год назад

      This is getting rather elevated for "Uneducated Economist". Perhaps Yanis Varifaulkis can be the next guest.

    • @drmodestoesq
      @drmodestoesq Год назад

      @@rogersmith7396 Not to be pedantic but it's Yanis Varoufakis.

    • @rogersmith7396
      @rogersmith7396 Год назад

      @@drmodestoesq Be as pedantic as you wish. After all its You tube.

  • @noumenon3020
    @noumenon3020 Год назад +10

    I drive a 2008 Chevy Cobalt. Bought with cash. Never had a major issue with it - just keep it well maintained. Whenever I feel the need to get a newer, nicer car, I just get little upgrades for the Cobalt. New stereo, new tires, new ignition coils, little things that make it a little better but stop me from spending way too much on a much nicer vehicle. It’s been a nice hack over the years, and now a good portion of the vehicle is customized to some extent. Nothing crazy like full suspension or exhaust mods, just little things. Fully recommend that for anyone that likes to make improvements but wants to do it within and under budget. Oh, and one of my coworkers who makes much less than me drives a brand new Mercedes sports coupe and is always complaining about being broke. Thanks for the video, Uneducated Economist!

  • @fishinforfun3359
    @fishinforfun3359 Год назад +30

    There is something to be said about driving an old vehicle. It’s almost a source of pride. I’ve always had old vehicles that I bang up in the woods some how but hey that’s what it’s for. I just need 4x4, good tires, and decent enough reliability, and I’m happy. Paid in cash. I’ve been recently concerned about my vehicle maybe breaking down and being done for, but I’m at peace with it for now. If it breaks, it breaks. If it keeps running, then cool. No sense to worry, just handle what happens with it when it happens.

    • @WorldPowerLabs
      @WorldPowerLabs Год назад +4

      I drive an old Ford truck from the late 1990s, with 320k miles on it. I have to repair issues from time to time, but I can count the number of times it has actually left me stranded on one hand, and still have several fingers left over (two failed alternators; it also fractured a rocker arm in the valvetrain, but I was able to carefully limp home). Provided that you start with a vehicle that's not a total lemon, and you keep up with maintenance, cars are not as unreliable as some of the "buy new" people would have you think.

    • @kensmith2796
      @kensmith2796 Год назад +2

      Yeah, I like the old Jeeps made prior to 2007. When I rent a car when I'm out of town I can't wait to turn in the keys and get back in my old Jeep.

  • @rolandthethompsongunner64
    @rolandthethompsongunner64 Год назад +12

    He’s right about the stress factor of owning a sweet ride. Car jacked, damaged , stolen. I don’t worry about any of that driving my beat up 20 year old pickup 😂

  • @scottvaj4434
    @scottvaj4434 Год назад +55

    I always go for a "sport" trim "beater" car so it looks nice and does a bit of everything. Still cheap, still cool, still reliable.

    • @ogdoprah
      @ogdoprah Год назад

      Whats an example

    • @lovedeathdisco
      @lovedeathdisco Год назад

      @@ogdoprahmy 1992 integra i bought for 1k still going 2yrs later might be an example 🤘🏼🤣

    • @brendansilva1710
      @brendansilva1710 Год назад +8

      @@ogdoprah i would say older manual honda coupes, or old v6 manual mustangs/camaros….

    • @stevens1041
      @stevens1041 Год назад

      Honda, haha. I know exactly what you meant when you wrote that, and you're right, the Sports trims are often a good deal for the upgrades you get.

    • @danitaylor_
      @danitaylor_ Год назад

      @@ogdoprah bmw e46 m sport 320d, 330d or a e39 m sport 530d is a good shout

  • @tedtuira6415
    @tedtuira6415 24 дня назад +2

    I also choose to drive a POS. Everyone tells me to buy a new car, but I choose to fix it since it’s all paid off. I tell them I’ll drive it until the wheels fall off. In the meantime I invest what I used to waste on car payments. I hope my investments pay off!!

  • @homebound-g3o
    @homebound-g3o Год назад +9

    I am currently paying off my wifes car. I am convinced that car payments are the single biggest finacial enemy for average americans period. I just wish I had learned eariler in life. As long as they have heat and air I think go as cheap as possiable. I think your advice here is spot on. I mean i like being able to buy a pizza every once in a while or a shirt at walmart. With these big car payments who can afford anything?

  • @jamieprewitt
    @jamieprewitt Год назад +38

    Drive a $800 vehicle, very reliable. Low insurance & fantastic gas mileage. Best feature. It doesn’t track where I’m going. Zero electronic surveillance. Been driving same vehicle for 20 years. Zero break downs …not one.

    • @adrianmoore2750
      @adrianmoore2750 Год назад +7

      Show me a reliable vehicle for $800 and I'll buy it right now

    • @chrismullin8304
      @chrismullin8304 Год назад

      @@adrianmoore2750Jamie got the last one. You have to find a $900 one….before me.

    • @mikerodix4800
      @mikerodix4800 Год назад +4

      You don't have a long commute do you

  • @johnnymula2305
    @johnnymula2305 Год назад +24

    Both sides are correct. It all depends on your circumstances.
    For myself. I always drive older vehicles. Im a body man/ car builder by trade. So an older (much nicer styled, easier to work on) vehicle always makes the best choice for me. Every vehicle i buy, i get cheap. Needing a few hundred dollars worth of work. Use them for a few months to years. Then sell them at a profit.
    I just recently went looking at a new vehicle because my schedules getting busier and its getting harder to find the time to work on my vehicles. I was looking all over for a decent deal on a new truck. Everyone wanted 4k-6500 down with 600-850 per month payments!
    I finally saw a Nissan Frontier for 2k down and 325. Per month. Its a lease. Which i will use as a business write off.
    But in the end. I decided to put that same down payment and am making the same monthly payments into my stock portfolio.
    Changed my wants and needs to profits. If you want to get ahead. You really have to be savvy. Its tough to not give into the shiny object temptations.

  • @85therealdeal
    @85therealdeal 11 месяцев назад +8

    I don't really watch your content much, but I think that this is one of the best videos that I have been on RUclips because it touches on my sentiment very strongly. I daily drive a 35 year old Corolla that I would have owned for 10 years at some stage next year.

  • @DePalma.
    @DePalma. Год назад +6

    My only vehicle:
    1994 Toyota pickup…16yrs

    • @DePalma.
      @DePalma. Год назад +1

      @@Travis12861 those are nice, I’m sure it’ll last a while😎

  • @bandito_kek
    @bandito_kek Год назад +56

    I don’t even know how to explain it, you are the coolest dude I’ve seen in awhile. I have the biggest urge to go out and buy a beater car even though my parents let me drive their 2014 suv anytime. Subscribed!

    • @SiisKolkytEuroo
      @SiisKolkytEuroo Год назад +17

      Keep driving that 2014 one, the best car to own is no car

    • @rails4ever
      @rails4ever Год назад +2

      @@SiisKolkytEuroo that is great advice if you wanna be stuck working a dead end job in your hometown for the rest of your life.

    • @SiisKolkytEuroo
      @SiisKolkytEuroo Год назад +6

      @@rails4ever I meant that as in, as long as he has access to that 2014 car, it's the best to keep using that one :D probably not for the rest of his life

    • @oscarbear7498
      @oscarbear7498 Год назад +1

      If your a single guy , looking for girls. GET A JEEP WRANGLER!! look it up for the price no other car comes close in attracting young hot girls.
      You can get a cool jeep wrangler for 10k stock. And mods then flip it for 15k. Jeeps are also the only car that keeps its value with mods.
      It's very fun, great beater, and the best part, attracts women.
      2nd car that has that chick🧲 is a 100k sports car.
      Nothing beats a tj jeep wrangler in best bang for your buck. Literally 😂
      I recommend a jeep tj 2 door, take doors off and go to a college bikini 👙 zone, girls will come.
      Granted for 10-15k you can get a cool muscle car , like a mustang, but your not getting girls, same with cool trucks, you'll only attract dudes!! 😂 who think the truck is cool. Bern there, made that mistake in college. Made cool car guy friends tho lol

    • @hugeslacker
      @hugeslacker Год назад

      @@oscarbear7498 the only problem with owning a jeep is having to drive it lol... coming from someone who's owned 10+ jeeps. But when you're young there's no reason not to own a wrangler. get a 1999 4.0 stick, and just be a jeep guy. get comfortable owning a car that rusts. nobody cares if it's a jeep

  • @hschofield82
    @hschofield82 Год назад +41

    Well put! While in my teen years I witnessed my father persisting in driving and maintaining a 1986 Volkswagen Rabbit (a diesel variant to boot). Although the Rabbit is now long gone, other "beaters" have replaced it. Presently I own and operate a 2006 Volvo V70. Old vehicles are just so much cheaper. Loved your talk.

    • @daevid21
      @daevid21 Год назад +2

      I’m addicted to cavaliers and sunfires when modded correctly some cool ass cars

    • @hschofield82
      @hschofield82 Год назад +1

      @@daevid21 Cool little cars. Unfortunately like many vehicles, the bodies tend to rust out when used through winter on salted roads. Nonetheless I still see some in action here in northern British Columbia.

    • @billpetersen298
      @billpetersen298 Год назад

      All my families cars, are 25yr and older Volvos.
      Yesterday we went up a very steep back road. To get to a mountain hike. With sign’s saying, 4x4’s only.
      If an old volvo wagon can’t get there, get a donkey.
      (I paid $450 for this one, 5 years ago)

    • @TK-ec5bv
      @TK-ec5bv Год назад

      Soak the entire undercarriage with 3 cans of Fluid Film every fall and rust won't be an issue.

  • @TheEriccurtis
    @TheEriccurtis 23 часа назад

    I bought a 2006 F-150 with 180 k on it for $7,400 dollars, put $1,000 dollars in tires on it , drove it for two weeks and it blew a spark plug, $1200 dollar repair, drive it for another month and the engine blew up, so total loss of $8,700 dollars and the truck is in the junkyard, so boy do I wish I could buy and afford a new truck! Sometimes a used vehicle is like burning your money.

    • @S2L.studio
      @S2L.studio 3 часа назад

      You bought an F150 with the 5.4L engine?

  • @joshua1auhsoj
    @joshua1auhsoj Год назад +11

    I drive a 1996 Buick. Bought it for 2k. Drive it daily without many issues. I agree with having 2 beaters that way if one breaks you have another. AAA is also pretty handy if you drive a beater.

  • @ESPSJ
    @ESPSJ Год назад +14

    I totally agree. I've owned a 2000 Hyundai Accent for 4 years or more now. I purchased it for $500 and it has cost me nothing in maintenance, it's got like 4 different types of oil in it and it just keeps going. My boss made a good point that the car has made me money because of how much I've saved by not owning a new car. Sure it's ugly and beat up, but that's where the battle against vanity kicks in and you learn a lot about it when you drive a car like that. I've heard people say some things about my car and at first it offended me, but I learned that people's opinions literally don't matter. Why should I care what someone thinks when they own a car that's costing them a fortune in interest and payments, but the car is depreciating? Then 3 weeks ago I bought a newer car and already I have to replace a steering rack and do other work to it. The cost of the repair is worth more than I've ever spent including purchase cost of my Hyundai.

  • @mushieslushie
    @mushieslushie Год назад +58

    As a kid my dream car was a Subaru Impreza because I really liked rally racing and Subaru was just simply a cool car at the time. I ended up getting a Subaru Impreza, the base model hatchback, not the WRX or STi etc. rally version. It ended up being a really good car. It's a hatchback, I can fit my bike, lots of things when I need to travel etc. and it has AWD so it's safer and more capable driving in snow. It's been an amazing car and made me learn a lot about how to spend money for something that suits your needs and not your wants.

    • @zanecallahan3948
      @zanecallahan3948 Год назад +3

      Nice! Subarus are great cars. I still have my 2000 Impreza Outback sport as my daily. When you look at cars as machines.. they don’t age like people. The key is maintenance and restoration over the long run. You’ll keep that car cost LOW

  • @MrMiniPancakes
    @MrMiniPancakes Год назад +2

    Enjoy your life, can’t take your money with you.

  • @MrJace-co2fc
    @MrJace-co2fc Год назад +23

    Great video. Last year, I almost traded in my 2008 Honda Civic for a 2015 Dodge Challenger. What held me back was the high insurance payment and the car note. I had cold feet, so I walked away. Instead, I bought myself a 1985 Chevy Camaro Z28. Paid cash for it. While I have my classic Camaro to work on and is in great shape in my garage, I still kept my Honda Civic as my daily driver. I have no debt and I have a nice classic car. It's perfect.

    • @Westisbest
      @Westisbest Год назад +3

      Hell yeah man that’s the way to do it

    • @lucysmith4242
      @lucysmith4242 Год назад +2

      The perfect car guy story. Your Camaro is going to appreciate fyi

    • @noelwinter-hj6lw
      @noelwinter-hj6lw Год назад +2

      Omg. When did a 1985 become a classic car!?? NOW I feel old. Thanks!

    • @MrJace-co2fc
      @MrJace-co2fc Год назад +1

      @@noelwinter-hj6lw lol. Yeah I see your point, I get it. 1985 is 38 years ago. I guess it's safe to say it's a classic.

  • @richktp1
    @richktp1 Год назад +9

    I have several coworkers who can not take a day off because they have car payments. I drive a 97 F150, and I can take a day off whenever I want. They get jealous, and I just laugh.

    • @wolfejar
      @wolfejar Год назад

      The Debtor is slave to the lender.
      There is no car I want that I’m willing to give up my “freedom”. I think you found that too.

    • @popisolation
      @popisolation 8 дней назад

      This isn't a car payment thing that's literally being financially dumb.
      I make a $450 car payment each month and I put $150 in savings 4 times a month each check.
      I'll never understand why some people like dirty old vehicles instead of learning how to be financially responsible and get something clean and enjoy something nice in life, what's the point in saving all that money when something can happen and you'll never be able to use it.

  • @brutebiz82
    @brutebiz82 Год назад +15

    Own and drive two vehicles. One is a 2003 Toyota Camry with a V6 and 380K miles; the other is a 2005 Toyota Tacoma with 435K miles. I've had the Camry for 15 years and the Tacoma for a decade. The only thing I've done is preventative maintenance and tires every few years on both. Since I reside in the Northeast and we use a generous quantity of salt and calcium chloride I apply fluid film to the frame every Fall, (pressure washing the undercarriage and drying BEFORE application). Neither are pretty to look at, but both are still on the road and continue to pass rigorous state inspection standards every year. Definitely have treated me well and allowed me to focus more on attaining my goals of financial security.

    • @neonreign2988
      @neonreign2988 Год назад +3

      Nothing beats the reliability of a Toyota. I have an '04 LE Camry with 207,000 miles that I daily and an '01 Lexus IS300 with 137k miles. It's nice having a dirt cheap insurance policy, even with PIP and underinsured motorist.

    • @WorldPowerLabs
      @WorldPowerLabs Год назад +1

      I have 320k miles on an old, late-1990s Ford truck... it's not as reliable as a Toyota, but nonetheless, parts are cheap and plentiful, it's easy to maintain and repair, and it's only left me stranded twice (two failed alternators). It's becoming difficult to get certain parts for my even-older Toyota.

    • @johnjones393
      @johnjones393 Год назад

      ​@@WorldPowerLabsThose late 90s Ford trucks were stout. Much better than their cars.

  • @jacobmiller5834
    @jacobmiller5834 Год назад +5

    Don't give your wife a credit card.

  • @youjustgottadrum
    @youjustgottadrum Год назад +9

    People have no idea that it is not how much money you make, it's how much you owe. You can be rich making 45k a year with no debt.

  • @DePalma.
    @DePalma. Год назад +31

    Great video. In my opinion, driving an old car is one of the best things you can do before you become financially straight.

    • @jayhemfindsyou
      @jayhemfindsyou Год назад +2

      and after you become financially straight. Instead of buying a new car once you are out of debt, put that money toward paying off your home mortgage faster.

    • @clickbaitpolice1750
      @clickbaitpolice1750 Год назад +1

      @@jayhemfindsyou yep!

  • @test143000
    @test143000 Год назад +2

    This doesn't work. An old car costs money and time. Whether you fix it in a garage or yourself. This cost time and money. The most unproductive thing in live is fixing a car. Time is a precious resource, do not waste it on fixing a car yourself or wasting time traveling to a local mechanic. This time is wasted and cannot be returned. Buy a cheap, small, reliable new car. A simple one. Front wheel drive only, 4-cylinder natural aspirated gasoline engine, weighting less than 1200 kg. Like Toyota, Hyundai or Kia. Select the most boring one, so it is sold with a discount, and nobody will try to steal it.

  • @jondhaene9610
    @jondhaene9610 Год назад +21

    Nailed it! Last car I drove was a 2008 Dodge Avenger. I had full coverage on it and got rear ended at a dead stop waiting on a red light. Luckily I wasn't hurt, but after some back and forth with the at fault insurance company they paid me out about $6k. Bought a slightly newer base model VW Golf even though I'd love a GTI. Another added benefit of driving a beater is that it forces you to adopt an engineer's mindset of problem solving which can be applied to a multitude of different situations.

    • @HexOmega3113
      @HexOmega3113 Год назад

      My 2010 avenger turned out to be a money trap the likes the world has never seen

  • @hotrodray6802
    @hotrodray6802 Год назад +10

    "You wouldn't worry about what people think about you if you realized how seldom they do."

    • @ryang.5094
      @ryang.5094 Год назад

      Stoicism

    • @rogersmith7396
      @rogersmith7396 Год назад +2

      Damn straight! You are alone. Deal with it.

    • @michaelsmith-bn6no
      @michaelsmith-bn6no Год назад +1

      I drive right at the speed limit just to piss people off. If the sign says 30, then i'll set my cruise right at 30. If i'm on the freeway, and the speed limit is 60, the cruise gets set at 60. No-one does the speed limit anymore except for me. The looks I get are hilarious.

    • @rogersmith7396
      @rogersmith7396 Год назад +1

      @@michaelsmith-bn6no I do. Yes it pisses people off and I laugh. Helpful trick: When they tailgate you as always, flip the mirror to night time and you don't even know they are there. Had one of these A holes following me when a deer jumped out which is normal here and I hit it as I locked the brakes. Mr. Shithead suddenly saw the problem with being a tail gator. And yes you can lock anti lock brakes.

  • @enigmathegrayman2953
    @enigmathegrayman2953 Год назад +6

    Just had a conversation yesterday with a family member that remembers when I leased a brand new Jeep Wrangler back in 2016 for 24 months (payments of $519) and since the end of the lease I bought a 2015 Chevy Sonic paid for in cash. My family member told me I’ve been going down hill with the ownership of my current (reliable used) car and that I need to get a better car. Over the past 5 years or so I’ve been in the best financial position in my life and all they can see is I’m going “down hill” driving a reliable used inexpensive car THAT I PAID CASH FOR I just don’t get broke people logic. 🤷🏽‍♂️🤷🏽‍♂️

  • @theravenousrabbit3671
    @theravenousrabbit3671 Месяц назад +2

    or no car at all if possible. I am 30. I am soon going to have a paid off house. Mostly thanks to not falling into the car money pit.

  • @danmorash6982
    @danmorash6982 Год назад +39

    I drive old beater vehicles. The money I saved over the last 15 years has transformed my life. I also drive 2 hours to and from work. Be sure you are honest with yourself and not making excuses.

    • @coreymurphy2711
      @coreymurphy2711 Год назад +2

      If u drive a beater 2 hours to work then your the kinda idiot the corporate machine loves

    • @Bvsterrrrrrrrr
      @Bvsterrrrrrrrr Год назад +1

      @@coreymurphy2711 maybe he is making $10k a month and he loves it.

  • @rnt45t1
    @rnt45t1 Год назад +15

    I financed a brand new Challenger in 2017, when I was 28 years old. It was completely out of self-indulgence and vanity. I paid $500 a month in financing, over $100 a month in insurance, and god knows how much in gas. The vehicle was fast, loud, and fun. It never got me laid. I sold it in 2021 when I was finally trying to get out of debt.
    I bought a $1,400 Pontiac Vibe when I sold the Challenger. I paid off all my other debt. Now I'm debt free and still drive the Vibe. Sometimes I miss that Challenger but the older I get the more I realize how much I can't stand people that drive Challengers.

  • @kelsea16
    @kelsea16 Год назад +30

    I love this mentality! This is what I am striving for. I’ve gotten rid of and sold a lot of things that I had that were/are very valuable these days, and made a great profit. Including my beautiful loaded F150. Now we drive 2 smaller cars, cheap on gas, and get my 10 minute commute done no problem, or drive my kids all over the place. It’s a great feeling to not be tied down by hefty payments, just to look cool driving through town

    • @loumonte658
      @loumonte658 Год назад +7

      Wisdom.

    • @JD-yx7be
      @JD-yx7be Год назад +6

      I was thinking of selling my 25 year old f250 and getting a new truck in 2021. Decided against it and very happy now that every other living expense has gone up. My truck is basically a classic now and won't lose any value and has minimal rust. Was selling for $2k a few years ago now the same truck is $7k

  • @alexlechef2
    @alexlechef2 Месяц назад +2

    you are 100% on point and I always lived like that but people dont want to hear it...

  • @Agenttaco-s17
    @Agenttaco-s17 Год назад +17

    I bought a 5 year old pickup truck, basically my dream truck, last year and it’s been a huge stressor in my life ever since. It’s needed a lot of maintenance even though it’s fairly new and while I can afford the payments it still makes me sick each time I make it, thinking what I could do with the money elsewhere. I kept my old car in case something happened like losing my job where I needed to get rid of the truck. It’s a 2005 Acura TL that I’ve had to put very little money into as far as maintenance over 6 years of ownership. I own it outright. I feel like with that in mind, and hearing the hard truth from your video, it’s time to turn that need I mentioned into a want and sell the damn truck I don’t need.
    I’m going to lose some money, I owe more than it’s worth, but I should make that back in the savings on not paying all the expenses over a few months.
    Thanks for sharing this. It’s hard for many of us to hear but it’s true.

    • @AlphaHybridPlus
      @AlphaHybridPlus Год назад

      Was it a RAM?

    • @Castleknight
      @Castleknight Год назад +1

      Yea, sell the truck.

    • @Argedis
      @Argedis Год назад +1

      Wise choice brother

    • @lldolph
      @lldolph Год назад +2

      Dang bro I'm in the exact same situation you just typed . It's about time I face the truth as well and sell this ram

  • @liamwil688
    @liamwil688 Год назад +44

    Just want to say that your video just appeared to me at the right time and is very inspiring. I own a 2000 Chevrolet Silverado with 340,000, Wisconsin rust, rotted frame, but engine is strong and very reliable for the pass two months I owned it. I also own a 2010 Hyundai accent with 148,000 miles and need to do minor maintenance every couple years. All my friends drive beautiful vehicles and they look so cool driving it but once they tell me that they pay $500-$700 a month in payments for a newer vehicle, my mind set changes and I don’t feel bad about driving my two beaters. Lately I’ve been wanting something nicer but I remember that “it’s not bout looking cool” bc looking cool means financial struggles. Thank you for your feedback on owning beater vehicles and how a vehicles does not define who you are.

    • @appalachianwoman561
      @appalachianwoman561 11 месяцев назад +1

      I have 3 vehicles a 2001 Chevy S10 ZR2 that has a lil over 94,000 miles (it was one owner bought new by my uncle so I know it's history), a 2002 Chevy Monte Carlo with over 130,000 miles, and a 2004 Mercedes C240 all of which I own and I do the work on (my dad was a mechanic and taught me, I've never taken a vehicle to a garage for anything except tires). Then there's my cousin who bought a 2023 Honda Accord the fancy trim kind, she paid $10,000 cash down and still her payment is $800 a month with her 700+ credit score. I don't understand who's doing this, some are paying outrageous amounts down like $10k and still ending up with payments that are close to $1,000 a month. Those people are so doomed the first time something happens bad in their life, or they get laid off.

  • @717Chris
    @717Chris Год назад +120

    There is a fine line between being savy with money and enjoying your life while your living.

    • @StephenBiz
      @StephenBiz Год назад +1

      fact

    • @Kado_Tornado
      @Kado_Tornado Год назад +2

      Bingo

    • @shaunr5450
      @shaunr5450 Год назад +50

      Ya these live like a peasant and save for the future types are not my style. The future isn't guaranteed and why do ppl think the years later in life are more valuable than the others?

    • @DEIFAN
      @DEIFAN Год назад +7

      This makes me debate if I wanna trade in my civic for a V6 Challenger

    • @717Chris
      @717Chris Год назад

      @@DEIFAN if you can afford it do it. People have different priorities. I'm a car guy so I'm gone get the best car I can afford monthly payments on and still have money to live comfortably. Ypu can die tomorrow. Save up for retirement your whole life and die right after you retire so your kids can enjoy. I live for now and the future. I put away for retirement and live good now.

  • @howlinberry1645
    @howlinberry1645 3 месяца назад +2

    Just dropped 2700 on my beater. It’s better than dropping 30k+ on a new car.

    • @BrandonGolets
      @BrandonGolets 3 месяца назад

      Keep that 30k invested. If you only earn 4.5% per year, that pays for your car in two years!

  • @oneset6545
    @oneset6545 Год назад +6

    Still driving my 2007 Honda Accord I bought in 2010 in high school 😊 Thank you for this video sir .

  • @corychecketts
    @corychecketts Год назад +126

    The 2001-2006 Lexus LS 430 is one of the best reliable and safe old cars you can buy. I paid $6,000 for mine. I bought it from the original owner who maintained it meticulously.
    It’s not a typical beater but it’s super nice and crazy reliable. I take my kids in it and feel safe using it.
    Thanks for the insight.

    • @adamgutierrez6408
      @adamgutierrez6408 Год назад +1

      I drive my kids in an 2001 Lexus es 300. And I feel just as safe

    • @piotr5646
      @piotr5646 Год назад +21

      a lexus LS430 is not a beater. That car was once a state of the art car worth over 60k new. 60k in 2004 is over 90k in today's money when you account for inflation. That car easily beats 90% of the new car market. really a hidden gem in the used car market

    • @AF-nb1ry
      @AF-nb1ry Год назад +2

      Awww man I absolutely love those cars, especially the 04-06 updated ones. Id kill for a black on black with the sport suspension and 5 spoke chrome wheels. I went to look at one earlier this year but the condition just wasnt up to par unfortunately. They are no longer something you can easily find for a good price though.

    • @seed.planted
      @seed.planted Год назад

      Get the ES or the GS. Definitely not the LS lol.

    • @YelaDuck
      @YelaDuck Год назад

      read my mind. Can't go wrong with a Lexus, Acura, or Infiniti that is well kept and I can't hardly tell the first glance difference between the mid 2000's models to the brand new. Only slight factor is the type of gas and usage in them of course. Great cars.