Tacoma, Tundra, 4Runner, LC, Sequioa. All of them
DCAggie13y said:Kansas Kid said:DCAggie13y said:Sims said:
Cars also used to get you from point a to point b.
Now the car drives itself while you watch a movie with 7.1 surround and your heated massaging seat melts your cares away.
Maybe they need a lower end vehicle that accomplishes a task in a pragmatic way.
This is so true. I just bought a 2025 vehicle after driving my 2010 car around for 15 years. Holy hell batman, my new car practically drives itself. The technology leap is insane.
And that is a large part of why your new car is more expensive. Luxury used to be cruise control, A/C and electric windows. Now it is a 7 speaker sound system, dynamic cruise, lane following, back up cameras, proximity sensors, high end nav systems, ability to connect with your vehicle online, heated and vented seats and steering wheels, etc.
I'm not complaining about the price at all. I can also control my car with an app.
You haven't been a kid until you are in that third seat facing the back of the station wagon with the window down (even with A/C never got back there) stuck in traffic breathing that heavenly aroma of exhaust fumes wafting in a shimmery haze.Quote:
It is amazing how much the new technology makes cars more enjoyable to drive and ride in unless you like the old fashion muscle cars with a manual transmission and no traction control. I get those folks too but I also love having lane following, dynamic cruise and a number of the creature comforts of newer cars.
My truck has 331k miles. I just got a tune up and it runs like it's brand new. I plan on driving it at least another 100k.CDUB98 said:
My truck is a 2013 with 161k miles. I wish I could buy a new one, but I'm too fearful of the future economic situation.
DCAggie13y said:Kansas Kid said:DCAggie13y said:Sims said:
Cars also used to get you from point a to point b.
Now the car drives itself while you watch a movie with 7.1 surround and your heated massaging seat melts your cares away.
Maybe they need a lower end vehicle that accomplishes a task in a pragmatic way.
This is so true. I just bought a 2025 vehicle after driving my 2010 car around for 15 years. Holy hell batman, my new car practically drives itself. The technology leap is insane.
And that is a large part of why your new car is more expensive. Luxury used to be cruise control, A/C and electric windows. Now it is a 7 speaker sound system, dynamic cruise, lane following, back up cameras, proximity sensors, high end nav systems, ability to connect with your vehicle online, heated and vented seats and steering wheels, etc.
I'm not complaining about the price at all. I can also control my car with an app.
Interest rates are going to go up. If you can afford cash, wait, prices will be lower. If you need to finance, maybe move sooner rather than later. If you lease, then you have bigger problems, and nothing I advise can help you.No Spin Ag said:BusterAg said:Only if you are dead-set on a BMW or Mercedes.No Spin Ag said:techno-ag said:
https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/markets/cars-were-once-a-financial-engine-of-america-s-middle-class-now-they-re-a-wealth-killer/ar-AA1tXWhC
Good article. Interview with people over at Dave Ramsey's podcast series. Average new car prices approaching $50k, many payments over $1k/mo. Used car averages close to $30k. Sucking up more and more income, now a trap more so than it ever was.
Government regs don't help of course, nor does the push for electrification.
Will tarrifs have any effect on auto prices?
Japan and South Korea have low or no tariffs on US sedans, so I don't see Trump jacking up tariffs on Hondas, Toyotas, Kias, or Hyundais.
Is it really important to you to own a European car?
Not at all. I was just asking to see what the market may look like in six months to a year when I'm looking for something new.
That's a pretty good description but the reality is that the break between Millennials and Gen Z is about age 27 right now.Sea Speed said:People use millennial as a catchall for essentially every person younger than they are. It's essentially used to describe anyone from 18 to 44.BowSowy said:Serious question, how many millennials do you know that are still living in the city (with roommates?), traveling all the time, and partying every weekend? I feel like your definition of millennial is stuck 10-15 years in the past, most of us late-30s and settled down with a family.Lathspell said:
Everyone also wants to live above their means.
Zoomers and Millennials expect the same lifestyle they experienced at the point when they left their parent's home, if they have even left. They also want status instead of living frugally:
- They want a brand new $35K+ car instead of a $12K used car, because god forbid someone isn't impressed with their ride.
- They want to live in a 1BR apartment in the nicest part of town so they can walk to nice restaurants, bars, and shopping, because god forbid they live with a few roommates.
- They want designer clothing and accessories, because god-forbid others see them as cheap.
- They want to travel and go out to party multiple times a week, because what kind of crazy world would it be if they couldn't life that extravagant weekend lifestyle?!
- They want the newest and nicest technology. A 2 Yr old iPhone is not good enough, they need to buy the latest and greatest iPhone every year.
And then they complain about life being expensive. I agree, it is more expensive than it should be. But they make it so much harder on themselves.
I've also heard people talk about not having money left over for their savings after all their expenses. What a backwards way of looking at your finances. They can't conceive of the idea that you put your money into your savings FIRST, and then look at the remainder and make your budgetary decisions.
15% of my income is taken out between 401K and my other investments before I even consider my budget for home, auto, and other expenses.
Besides, none of that has anything to do with the fact that cars are way too expensive. You just wanted to get a rant in.
As you've bragged on this forum many times before, most folks don't have your additional tax free income stream.Teslag said:aggiehawg said:Ditto. Since 1989, I have had three vehicles in total. 1989 Mercedes. 2003 Trailblazer, 2017 Traverse. And the only reason I bought the Trailblazer was because we had recently purchased a lake house, that was off a dirt and gravel road and needed to haul stuff (including my Mom and her stuff) back and forth. My Mercedes was just too small. Needed the cargo room of the SUV.Quote:
Considering I typically keep cars for 10-15 years, if I could get 96 months at 0%, I'd do it in a heartbeat and you'd see me rolling a Denali.
I love, love, loved my Mercedes and didn't sell it quickly after I got the Trailblazer. But after several weeks of driving the Traiblazer, I had occasion to drive the Mercedes and suddenly it felt so low to the ground and so small. Finally sold it to my Mom's neighbor who had always liked it.
I'm the complete opposite. I average a new car every 3 years or so. I replaced a 2021 Chevy 1500 with 2023 Chevy 2500 diesel in April of this year. Just replaced it with a 2024 Colorado a few weeks ago.
Also why the BMW X3 now is the size of an old X5.EMY92 said:javajaws said:When you add the insurance cost to that it would end up costing more than my mortgage. The pricing is totally out of whack.AggieDruggist89 said:
I struggle to comprehend people buying $90,000+ American Made SUVs.
Government efficiency regulations need to be loosened
The EV push needs to stop (let it be market driven not policy driven)
Manufacturers need to stop bloating every vehicle they make (in size AND features)
Insurance industry needs....something. The costs are outrageous. I don't know what the fix here might be other than cheaper vehicles to start with.
Why do you want manufacturers to provide things people don't want? I see that Mitsubishi is killing their little econo box that is the only new vehicle with a sticker price under $20,000 because no one is buying them.
In the US people want big vehicles, that's why everyone is making SUVs.
BadMoonRisin said:
Who was it that passed a law that all new vehicles starting in 2030 had to have a breathalyzer wired to their ignition?
California again?
IIIHorn said:BadMoonRisin said:
Who was it that passed a law that all new vehicles starting in 2030 had to have a breathalyzer wired to their ignition?
California again?
The tube connects to the cylinders to increase gas mileage
HollywoodBQ said:As you've bragged on this forum many times before, most folks don't have your additional tax free income stream.Teslag said:aggiehawg said:Ditto. Since 1989, I have had three vehicles in total. 1989 Mercedes. 2003 Trailblazer, 2017 Traverse. And the only reason I bought the Trailblazer was because we had recently purchased a lake house, that was off a dirt and gravel road and needed to haul stuff (including my Mom and her stuff) back and forth. My Mercedes was just too small. Needed the cargo room of the SUV.Quote:
Considering I typically keep cars for 10-15 years, if I could get 96 months at 0%, I'd do it in a heartbeat and you'd see me rolling a Denali.
I love, love, loved my Mercedes and didn't sell it quickly after I got the Trailblazer. But after several weeks of driving the Traiblazer, I had occasion to drive the Mercedes and suddenly it felt so low to the ground and so small. Finally sold it to my Mom's neighbor who had always liked it.
I'm the complete opposite. I average a new car every 3 years or so. I replaced a 2021 Chevy 1500 with 2023 Chevy 2500 diesel in April of this year. Just replaced it with a 2024 Colorado a few weeks ago.
Drop an extra $4k in my account every month and forget about cars, I'm going straight to hookers and blow.
Damien Thorn said:They are good cars.AggieDruggist89 said:
Used Toyota for the win.
Good cars but the Taco is quite expensive these days.Damien Thorn said:They are good cars.AggieDruggist89 said:
Used Toyota for the win.
CDUB98 said:
My truck is a 2013 with 161k miles. I wish I could buy a new one, but I'm too fearful of the future economic situation.
Ellis Wyatt said:If it isn't already abundantly clear, "they" do not want people having the ability to move freely wherever they want to go.Sims said:
Cars also used to get you from point a to point b.
Now the car drives itself while you watch a movie with 7.1 surround and your heated massaging seat melts your cares away.
Maybe they need a lower end vehicle that accomplishes a task in a pragmatic way.
Smudge said:
Yeah… I still drive an '06 Xterra. 230k miles. Two years ago I bought a F150 and hated all the bells and whistles. Ride was nice and it was a cool truck, but just overkill. Sold it and bought an '05 F250 with 60k miles just to have a truck when I need one. Have a plow on it, and it's awesome.
Just got my wife a new palisade last year and she loves it, and I can get my fix with all the tech whenever I do drive it. The auto brights and windshield wipers are pretty sweet but I could leave the rest.
Put a new engine and transmission in the xterra so hoping to get another 200k on it. Love that thing. I do wish you could get an F150 with no tech at all aside from Bluetooth. But $40-50k for the most basic f150, or similar is robbery.
The worst millennials are the ones that will be born 5 years from now. Stupid ass kids!Sea Speed said:BowSowy said:Serious question, how many millennials do you know that are still living in the city (with roommates?), traveling all the time, and partying every weekend? I feel like your definition of millennial is stuck 10-15 years in the past, most of us late-30s and settled down with a family.Lathspell said:
Everyone also wants to live above their means.
Zoomers and Millennials expect the same lifestyle they experienced at the point when they left their parent's home, if they have even left. They also want status instead of living frugally:
- They want a brand new $35K+ car instead of a $12K used car, because god forbid someone isn't impressed with their ride.
- They want to live in a 1BR apartment in the nicest part of town so they can walk to nice restaurants, bars, and shopping, because god forbid they live with a few roommates.
- They want designer clothing and accessories, because god-forbid others see them as cheap.
- They want to travel and go out to party multiple times a week, because what kind of crazy world would it be if they couldn't life that extravagant weekend lifestyle?!
- They want the newest and nicest technology. A 2 Yr old iPhone is not good enough, they need to buy the latest and greatest iPhone every year.
And then they complain about life being expensive. I agree, it is more expensive than it should be. But they make it so much harder on themselves.
I've also heard people talk about not having money left over for their savings after all their expenses. What a backwards way of looking at your finances. They can't conceive of the idea that you put your money into your savings FIRST, and then look at the remainder and make your budgetary decisions.
15% of my income is taken out between 401K and my other investments before I even consider my budget for home, auto, and other expenses.
Besides, none of that has anything to do with the fact that cars are way too expensive. You just wanted to get a rant in.
People use millennial as a catchall for essentially every person younger than they are. It's essentially used to describe anyone from 18 to 44.
What do you propose him to do to make auto prices go down? They have always gone up, as has housing costs and many other things. Some years a lot, some years not as much, but always up.No Spin Ag said:
Hopefully Trump will be able to get prices of autos down to at least where they were at right before covid hit.
Funky Winkerbean said:AggieDruggist89 said:
I struggle to comprehend people buying $90,000+ American Made SUVs.
Go look at prices people are paying for boats.
lb3 said:Good cars but the Taco is quite expensive these days.Damien Thorn said:They are good cars.AggieDruggist89 said:
Used Toyota for the win.
AggieDruggist89 said:Most high end german carNo Spin Ag said:AggieDruggist89 said:
I struggle to comprehend people buying $90,000+ American Made SUVs.
Agreed.
Cadillac Escalades are basically houses with home entertainment systems in them.
I mean, if you can afford it, without any problems, go for it. For me, that's high end German luxury vehicle prices, and those are much better in every way.owners are typically broke.