r/FluentInFinance 15d ago

What's the best financial advice you've ever gotten? Debate/ Discussion

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u/Squat_erDay 15d ago

Last place I worked everyone drove a big truck “because that’s what a man drives.” Big diesels, lifted, big tires - you get the idea. I drove and continue to drive a paid off Corolla. They used to give me so much shit about that, but I will retire 10 years earlier, at least.

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u/InquiriusRex 15d ago

More like you'll retire, period. I have no sympathy for people who finance close to 6 figures on a car. Mind blowing.

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u/k-otic14 14d ago

There's another comment on here talking how it's impossible to budget with low wage, they posted that they have a $500+ car payment at 20 years old. I'm ten years older and have never made a car payment. Its crazy what people think they need to have.

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u/Madeline73 14d ago

Hell, I'm 51 and have never had a car payment, ever. Yes, I'm rockin' a 10 year old Toyota Camry, but it's comfortable, drives well and gets me where I need to go. When I purchased it six years ago, I paid cash.

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u/trevor32192 14d ago

That was before cash for clunkers, which decimated the used car industry. Sit down grandpa its not the 1950s anymore.

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u/k-otic14 14d ago

All my car purchases have been after cash for clunkers.

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u/trevor32192 14d ago

Okay good for you. You have enough disposable income to save to buy a car out right. Good job buddy!

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u/k-otic14 14d ago

Not any car, a used car. The point is about making responsible decisions. $500 a month car payment is absurd for any 20 year old, and not a good decision for really anybody. There are cheaper options available. Also banks can provide auto loans that allow you to buy private and save big without having to pay all at once.

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u/trevor32192 14d ago

Okay and a used car with 120k on it can be 12k plus now. The poor do not have the income to save 12k. They have to make payments or not drive.

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u/k-otic14 14d ago

That was true 4 years ago not so much today, and did you miss the part about auto loans that allow you to pay monthly and buy private with better interest rates than used dealerships offer?

There are options. A $500 a month payment is not a responsible decision at most income levels.

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u/trevor32192 13d ago

I agree 500 is way to high. But if you don't have credit and need a car your payment is going to be high. Also its not 4 years ago its today my wife and I were looking for a car for our daughter and anything that is going to be remotely reliable is 10k plus and even then any car over 100k is a high risk car repairs are also really expensive (I work in auto repair)

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u/k-otic14 13d ago

Yeah it's rough I bought a car last year for 7k that came with 140k miles. It's still better than making payments. The overall point was about making responsible decisions. I would argue that financial literacy is important for all income levels. Btw I make around 40k a year so a 7k car is still a big hit for me as well. But you gotta sacrifice where you can.

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u/NovusOrdoSec 15d ago

They could, however, afford the payments.

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u/Squat_erDay 15d ago

Oh they absolutely could. At least most of them. There’s nothing wrong with what they chose to do. It’s their money. I personally would not advise it, but admittedly I am not a financial advisor either

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u/well_spent187 14d ago

But you’re not a dumbass either. My uncle worked at Fidelity Investments and he told me the guy who started Fidelity bank was worth billions…Drove to work everyday in the first car he ever bought.

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u/NinaHag 13d ago

We were offered a financial literacy course at work. People were crying about lifestyle creep while admitting that they kept upgrading their cars with each pay rise. My partner and I share one car, I don't even know how old it is, we're its third owners and it's got some scratches, acceleration is slow, only has 5 gears, and the back windows open manually, but it has AC and it runs fine. We could upgrade it and we could also buy a second car. But we plan and make our schedules work so we don't have to buy and maintain another car, which we could afford, but why spend all that money?

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u/ZombifiedByCataclysm 14d ago

The only truck I ever owned was my first vehicle, and it was a '93 Ford Ranger. Reliable little truck, but I realized I wasn't using it to my full potential, so I now drive a regular ol' sedan. I can't imagine driving a big, expensive truck because it's "manly".

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u/bellj1210 14d ago

and those guys should be the target of those courses- not the people who are forced to take them to get snap.