duper
Well-known member
Re: Cars
I actually meant to respond to your question as well. I have obviously never bought a service contract, since I've never owned a car that was under warranty in the first place, but I'm about 90 percent sure that if you took the price of the service contract and put it away instead of buying the service contract, you would have from that stash plenty of money to handle repairs as they come up. As people have said, just about any car you buy nowadays ought to get you 150 thousand with very little problem.
I can understand preferring the predictability of a car payment if you can afford it, but you are definitely not saving money that way, you're just able to budget for it more easily. I've never had a car that I had to spend more than $150 a month maintaining (probably never averaged anywhere near that much) and that would be an awful cheap car payment. That said, I have had two cars that I replaced because they needed a repair that cost more than it was worth to sink into them. So like you said, it is unpredictable, but with the (I'm guessing) $300 - $400 that I'm saving by not making a car payment, I feel like I come out way ahead.I definitely prefer the reasonable monthly payment you're prepared for and can tailor to your budget than a repair to a high mileage vehicle...possibly in the thousands of $$$ and more than the vehicles worth. Spending money on repairs, even larger amounts can make sense if you get years of trouble / expense free usage afterwards. Start having to make expensive repairs on a regular / semi regular basis to low value vehicles is not smart IMO. Even frequent less expensive repairs will nickle and dime you to death and either way, before you know it you've spent as much or more in a couple years than you would have spent on new car payments...and you're still driving an old car. Cheaper insurance on the older car is a consideration too.
Replacing a clutch once over 100,000 miles is pretty good service out of that clutch. They're definitely a wear item that will always wear out eventually.
I actually meant to respond to your question as well. I have obviously never bought a service contract, since I've never owned a car that was under warranty in the first place, but I'm about 90 percent sure that if you took the price of the service contract and put it away instead of buying the service contract, you would have from that stash plenty of money to handle repairs as they come up. As people have said, just about any car you buy nowadays ought to get you 150 thousand with very little problem.
Last edited: