I'm getting ready to finish up college, and, having just sold my Turbo T, I will be looking for a new car upon graduation. Does anyone know of some good guidelines for a sensible amount to pay for a car related to yearly salary?
*****Congratulations on finishing up college.
Example: If I'm making $55,000/year, is buying a $30,000 car not feasible?
*****If you plan on financing most or all of it, and have to also pay off school loans, pay rent, save for eventually buying your own place, etc.. I would say $30k is way too much car for you at that salary. Plenty of people do it, but most people in the US save less than 1% of their income year to year. Many who make good salaries truthfully have nothing to show for it other than a nice car, and big credit card bill payments.
I know that I will have to take into consideration many factors, such as down payment, monthly payment plan, length of financing, etc. I'm just trying to figure out what kind of car I might be able to afford when I start my life in the real world.
*****The rule my financial planner gave me when I asked him this question was to spend no more than approx 8% of your monthly salary on a car payment, insurance for it, etc.. Therefore, at $55,000 per year, you are bringing in $4583 per month, so 8% of that is about $367 dollars per month.
***** The exception to the above rule was if you are in the type of work where you need to have a nice car for more than transportation (driving around clients as a real estate agent has to sometimes, etc..), and can write off mileage, depreciate the vehicle due to your line of work, etc.. In that case, leasing a car might make more sense depending on whether you tend to keep cars for a long time, etc..
***** Since a car you presumably use as a daily driver is not generally considered a good, appreciable investment (it loses value as you drive it off the lot and use it..etc..), it might almost make better sense to just get something cheaper (mebbe used..) at first using the above guidelines, to keep your payments truly affordable until you have more savings, get raises, etc... than to splurge on a really nice car now.
***** It's always easy to spend money, especially with so many financing options available now, but by getting a really nice car now and being saddled with high payments for 4-5 years or whatever, you are greatly limiting your ability to get some other things that will mean so much more for you and your future, like a nicer house, or a more diversified true investment portfolio (strong 401k, ROTH IRA, etc..) which will add up to much more money down the line for you to spend on stuff that others only dream about. It's the magic of compound interest.
I'm hoping to buy back my T sometime after graduation, or get another TR. I will definately have a Turbo Buick sometime in the next few years, but only after I have a daily driver that I can put miles on and not have to worry about.