Did you recently take on (or consider) a loan of 84 months or longer on a car purchase?
A reporter would like to speak with you about your experience; please reach out to PR@Edmunds.com by 7/22 for details.
A reporter would like to speak with you about your experience; please reach out to PR@Edmunds.com by 7/22 for details.
Options
Comments
Ken
He came back to me with a match from Onyx Financing (an arm of CapOne, i believe), and told me he'd prefer to go with that one because it would save him some paperwork with no financial benefit.
That sounded a little fishy -- why would a dealer possibly go through the hassle of a third-party finance company without any financial upside.
I'm indifferent as long as the rates are the same -- should I be? If he's making a little extra is it enough for me to want a piece of?
Thanks!
I am about to go back to business school and take on an enormous debt. I need a car at school so I am wondering if I would be better off applying for financing before I leave my current job? Also, I am wondering what my cheapest financing option is an which will reflect the best on my credit report since I don't want to get any school loans denied next year because of a car loan. (current rating 683, sal 58k)
I am not even sure how or if a lease appears on your credit report. If it doesn't I was thinking this might be a preferable option?
Thank you for any insights!
Chris
Definitely get the car before you quit your curent job.
Car_man
Host
Smart Shopper Forum
Before you go in there, go down to your local bank, and talk to a loan officer.. Tell them what you want to do, and how much money you have to put down.. You never know.. it is possible that they may beat the dealer's rate by 2%-5%..
Even if you take the dealer's financing, read the contract carefully.... They are probably adding in a lot of charges you didn't agree to...
regards,
kyfdx
Edmunds Price Checker
Edmunds Lease Calculator
Did you get a good deal? Be sure to come back and share!
Edmunds Moderator
Thanks
Any more thoughts on this?????
aaaaah, scuse me ..... mines paid for ...
Terry
Sorry.. .keep getting them mixed up...
Edmunds Price Checker
Edmunds Lease Calculator
Did you get a good deal? Be sure to come back and share!
Edmunds Moderator
$295 per month would finance an EXTRA $1632
Check with a few local banks or credit unions.
Don
I have the total amount to be financed (negotiated car price - cash down + license & fees), APR and number of months.
I know there are plenty of online calculators to determine the monthly payment, but I need to know the equation so I'll be able to create an excel spreadsheet I can take with me to the car dealer.
Also, if the dealer finances me through a local bank (as opposed to BMWFS), is there a legitimate banking/processing/document fee or is that a junk fee? I guess my question is other than government fees, what are legitimate fees in a deal to buy a car, both new and used?
Thanks
Just like a mortgage, you pay a certain amount every month.
But every month, the portion for interest is different:
(outstanding balance) * (Interest Rate)/12 goes towards interest.
The rest goes to principal. The whole thing is worked out through a process of magic.
For low interest rates, you can do this:
Total interest is (principal)*(Interest Rate)/2 * # of years. Divide by number of months, and voila, you have the interest portion.
This ignores compounding and is therefore low... so add a 1/4 point or so to half the interest rate, and voila:
$10k over 5 years at 6%:
$10,000 * 0.0325 * 5 = $1,625
Divide by 60 is $27.08 per month.
$10,000/60 = $166.67 per month for the principal.
Together, it comes to a monthly payment of $193.75
Using my credit union's calculator, one gets $193.30
-Mathias
http://mathforum.org/library/drmath/view/54609.html
You could also invest $30 in a TI BA II business calculator which can do all the calculations for you while you are at the car dealership. It's easier than trying to get Excel to handle all the variables and rounding problems, unless you have a module added into your excel to handle basic differential equations. A simple C program might do the trick easier for you. (Do kids today even know how to program from the command prompt?
Honestly, I have found it nice when buying a car to have a calculator in hand to verify all the numbers being added, subtracted, calculated, etc.
> but I need to know the equation so I'll be able to create an excel spreadsheet
> I can take with me to the car dealer.
Download this to your laptop. The Excel calculations have been done for you.
http://www.vertex42.com/ExcelTemplates/excel-amortization-spreadsheet.html
Don
I'm currently looking to finance a new SUV, more likely a 4runner; but im self employed; credit score is 680, bankrupcy discharged in '02, no debts at the moment, own a 1995 4runner, and I wonder if the dealership can offer no income verification loans? I can put as much as 8000$ for DP, but before I even try to sell my 95 4runner, i need to know i could get appoved for a lona at a dealership showing no proof of income.
thx
He can't verify it with a tax return because he has lied about his income on the application. However, most lenders will not care about this unless your credit is piss-poor since your car payment is usually #2 on your financial list (rent/mortgage being #1).
Obviously I'm not lookin' at your credit report ... but I have a feeling you're going hafta prove your last 3 years because there is going to be some accounts that still show open and probably "unpaid" ..... remember - it's not the dealer that makes the decisions, it's the lender ......
Terry.
How did you feel while waiting for the dealer to come back to you with the payment terms? Did you feel suspense? Concern? Excitement? Other emotions? Please be specific.
When you saw the payment terms, were you excited? Disappointed? Unmoved?
Would love to know this since I am currently shopping for my first new car and am interested in what to expect.
- Save some money (2% Differ.).
- Get the title intead of waiting (Not really important)
Any problem that I don't think of :confuse: ? Your advice, please? Thanks.
Second, if your water heater blows, Roof needs replaced, kid needs braces etc... do you have enough money in savings to cover these things? If you max out your credit card with a car and use up any rainy day money, you could be setting yourself up for disaster.
Third this will hurt your credit score tremendously. I don't know your situation and you may not need to apply for any credit in the near future, but a high revolving balance will affect you much more than a high installment balance.
Thanks for your advice.
I 'm cleared on your first two. For the third one, I dont understand how carrying high revolving balance is worse than high installment balance ( in affecting your credit score). you owe money either way?
Where should i find this financial lesson?
You are correct that you owe the same amount of money. It is just how the scoring system views what type of debt that you carry. From what I understand, any card that you have more than 40% of its highest balance on is viewed as negative. In English if you have a card with a limit of $10,000 that you have never put more than $5,000 on and your balance is over $2,000 currently, that will lower your score considerably.
I'm in sort of a dilema right now. I'm upside down on my car loan mainly because wells fargo offered to take additional credit card balances and tack them onto the loan.
Here in lies the problem. I'm moving to NYC in January and will not need a car. Can I possible have the bank buy the car and I owe/make payments on the remaining balance? Or do I go to a dealership, have them do a payoff and I owe the remaining balance?
any help is much appreciated!
thanks! :confuse:
I CAN pay it off each month, that's not the issue. A dealer once asked me if I worked and I told him no and asked if it mattered, he said no as long as I can afford it. But how do you prove that? I've seen financing applications that want you to have an income of at least 2,000.... I don't even need 2,000. It's not like I have other bills. I'm trying to find a used for like $200 a month and have came across a few.
Should I be applying somewhere like a bank loan instead of at a car dealership? I want a Honda and the reputable Honda dealership I'm considering keeps advertising "No credit, low credit..doesn't matter.". I have credit, I don't have enough of an income and never will unless I get a car.
Any suggestions/advice? Do you think I have a chance with Honda Financial? Or anyone else?
You have one option - lie on your application about being employed somewhere, or call yourself employed. Unless you have rock bottom credit, no lender will make you prove this.
Not a single bank will loan you $X to repay in payments of $300 / month when you have no job and no money in the bank. Period.
I was denied by an online loan company at the same time. Ended up financing through Citizens Auto Finance, out of Rhode Island.
Car_man
Host
Smart Shopper / Prices Paid Forums
I got to rethink about it.
I called a place today and for the hell of it told them I work and make like $1,000 a month just to see what they'd say.. they said they could still make it work. Eh.
Is it better to apply online for financing anyway just so they don't try and screw you with higher rates? I already know my credit scores.
What online loan company denied you? So I don't try there. lol. I'm from RI so maybe I'll also try Citizens.
Be sure to research, know what you can afford. Understand every paper presented BEFORE you sign it. Ask questions. The less emotional you get, the better off you'll be. You're spending your hard-earned money, spend it carefully.
That said, buying a car is exciting. When I test drove my 91 lumina back in '98, I was thrilled. It has power, is the right color, and the price wasn't bad. I went to my bank, told the loan officer what I was buying, how much I needed to borrow, and he told me how much it would cost me to borrow that money. It was a straightforward deal.
Didn't your parents teach you that fibbing is wrong?? What do you do if they ask for proof of income?? Quite common these days.
What if the bank decided to call your phoney employer to check on the application?? this is common also.
What if the bank finds out the fraud was committed and decides to pursue the issue??
Nothing good comes out of a lie on a legal document like a loan application.
MODERATOR /ADMINISTRATOR
Find me at kirstie_h@edmunds.com - or send a private message by clicking on my name.
2015 Kia Soul, 2021 Subaru Forester (kirstie_h), 2024 GMC Sierra 1500 (mr. kirstie_h)
Review your vehicle
In addition, I have asked to get copies of my currently signed paperwork and they are telling me that until they have the actual Vehicle Identification number they can not legally give me copies. I was under the impression you should get any paperwork that you as a customer sign on. Please advise on this too. What are they afraid of by sending me the paperwork?
As far as what the finance person is going to try to sell you, rest assured you will hear about extended warranty. These can be a good deal in some cases, it just depends upon your willingness to put up with risk. Life and Disability insurance will be discussed. Probably some sort of paint protection and security system will be offered to you. You don't have to buy any of these, but some might make sense for you. Keep an open mind and remember that everything is negotiable.
* background:
I been living in the US since December 2003 (got relocated by my company). We do have a car, which we bought person-to-person October 2004 (Jeep Grand Cherokee Laredo, 1998, 60,000 miles - new tires, AC is busted)
I've checked my credit score with the three bureaus - Equifax is giving me 727, Experian 731 and TransUnion 711. So far, so good
* question:
I want to buy a new Jeep Grand Cherokee Laredo, 2005, from an authorized dealer, and I've two questions:
a) dealer is offering me $ 5,000 for the Jeep. Says 'AC is busted, that will cost at least 1500 to fix'. Says he actually should give me no more than 4,000 - 4,200, but 'he likes me' - am I being screwed here?
b) While I could apply for credit at the dealer, I've been checking both eloans.com and capital one auto financing. I'm looking at a 48-months loan, dealer told me they're going with 12% APR - I'm located in New Jersey. Both online sites quote 5.25% APR for 48-months loan, for customer with 'substantial and excellent credit record'. So, questions: has anyone applied in similar conditions than me (less than two years credit history?). And even if I get quoted a higher APR, but lower than the dealer, would still be better to go with them instead of dealership financing?
Thanks in advance !
I think it is very important that you go to a local bank or credit union (start where you have your checking account), and ask them to pre-approve you for a car loan.. Then, you'll have something solid to compare the other offers to...
Car dealers make money on selling you financing... If they can sell you a loan with a higher interest rate, they make more money.. A bank will usually give you their best offer upfront, especially if you are a current customer..
Once you have the bank's preapproval, then if the dealer can beat the rate, so much the better...
I'm sorry... I have no opinion on the trade-in value of your Jeep..
regards,
kyfdx
Host-Prices Paid Forums
Edmunds Price Checker
Edmunds Lease Calculator
Did you get a good deal? Be sure to come back and share!
Edmunds Moderator
1.) the value of the vehicle (real $$) and keeping the vast majority of the money in your pocket ...
2.) and what the best lease deal is with limited money down -- meaning, putting down 1st, security and maybe some small tag and state fee's down ...
Remember, your renting this car for the next 2/3 years ... large amounts of money down do 1 thing and 1 thing only - it reduces the payment ...... it builds no equity, it doesn't change the residual or the pay-off ~ and "if" it gets stolen or totaled, the money evaporates - gone.! ..... if it's a nice, clean $5,000 trade - you might be better off sending it down Retail Rd and forgetting the trade idea ......
Terry :shades:
You can lease a demo vehicle, used vehicles do not qualify for manufacturers' new vehicle lease programs. If you have any other specific questions about leasing a Toyota Corolla, make sure to stop by the following discussion: "Toyota Corolla: Lease Questions".
Car_man
Host
Smart Shopper / Prices Paid Forums