Cost of car as % of salary
Author
Discussion

gbbird

Original Poster:

5,197 posts

266 months

Sunday 8th March 2009
quotequote all
I appreciate there are potentially lots of factors at play here, but i was just wondering if there is any rule of thumb PHers follow as to how much one should fork out on a car in relation to their annual salary? For example, i am thinking of purchasing a car which costs roughly the same as a years salary for me. Would this be pushing it?

G

Jasandjules

71,903 posts

251 months

Sunday 8th March 2009
quotequote all
Been there, done that.... If you've saved enough money so that you can pay say half the car off then borrow the remainder over 3-5 years then it is, IME, perfectly do-able.

It also depends on if you have a house, any other cars etc..

andy-xr

13,204 posts

226 months

Sunday 8th March 2009
quotequote all
Also been there done that and walked away wounded a little from a PCP. Mine was more than my mortgage p/m, really wasnt worth the expense for a car that wasnt mine

ALawson

8,014 posts

273 months

Sunday 8th March 2009
quotequote all
I think I read 40% somewhere but as said above all depends upon how much spare cash you have a month (every month) and the initial down payment.

Edited by ALawson on Sunday 8th March 08:37

anonymous-user

76 months

Sunday 8th March 2009
quotequote all
About 15% gross, maybe I could use this to persuade the better half thats its time for an upgrade!

Swilly

9,699 posts

296 months

Sunday 8th March 2009
quotequote all
Taking a broad brush account of all other expenses and a comfort zone i would say 10% of your earnings after tax per month.

Obviously the bigger the initial deposit you have the better the car you could afford.

Dr Jekyll

23,820 posts

283 months

Sunday 8th March 2009
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As much as you can find without resorting to finance perhaps?

paperbag

Colonial

13,553 posts

227 months

Sunday 8th March 2009
quotequote all
Dr Jekyll said:
As much as you can find without resorting to finance perhaps?

paperbag
I have no problems using affordable finance.

The interest on my repayments was lower than what I had my money invested at (locked in) so seemed like a no brainer to me.