Car depreciation losers
Author
Discussion

TotalControl

Original Poster:

8,278 posts

220 months

Saturday 20th November 2010
quotequote all
Seen this on MSN. How true is this of cars in the classifieds/ currently for sale?

http://cars.uk.msn.com/features/used-car-guide/pho...

kambites

70,528 posts

243 months

Saturday 20th November 2010
quotequote all
eek

That Phaeton:

Price new: £78,200
Predicted price after 12 months/10,000 miles: £29,023
Amount lost: £49,177 (62.9%)


63% of its value in one year?!?

RichTT

3,266 posts

193 months

Saturday 20th November 2010
quotequote all
Seems reasonably credible. I lost £4k on my wife's TT in 12 months not including the £700 or so the stealers charged for water pump/timing belt and of course £400 for two rear tires and petrol costs. Biggest purchase mistake I've ever made.

Efbe

9,251 posts

188 months

Saturday 20th November 2010
quotequote all
surely this should just say all new cars??

it does make me laugh though, when people care so much about an extra group insurance, or 1 or 2 more mpg, when their car is just going to depreciate by 10k in a year.

still, don't stop doing it, because it leaves more used cars out there for me to buy with little or no depreciation worries!

WeirdNeville

6,034 posts

237 months

Saturday 20th November 2010
quotequote all
Efbe said:
surely this should just say all new cars??

it does make me laugh though, when people care so much about an extra group insurance, or 1 or 2 more mpg, when their car is just going to depreciate by 10k in a year.

still, don't stop doing it, because it leaves more used cars out there for me to buy with little or no depreciation worries!
This.

Drive a car off of the forecourt, and you might as well bin a Grand. Any car. Even an appreciating a classic, because by starting it up, you've de-valued it.

I love buying cars at the end of their life cycle, I feel I've had great value for money motoring.

For example:
Nissan 200SX, Bought for £4,100, sold 2 years and 15,000 miles later for £3,300. That's £800 depreciation.
1988 Toyota MR2. Bought for £1,650, sold 2 years and 14,000 miles later for £1,650. biggrin
Just bought a leggy BMW 328i which is lovely for £700, I'll be happy to weigh it in for scrap if it fails it's next MOT in a big way, but I suspect it won't. I've already done 7,000 miles in it.

I can't understand anyone except the super-rich buying a new car - it just makes no financial sense whatsoever.

But please, keep doing it. I'll have your car in 12 years or so!

whoami

13,176 posts

262 months

Saturday 20th November 2010
quotequote all
These lists are as depressing as they are inaccurate.

Efbe

9,251 posts

188 months

Saturday 20th November 2010
quotequote all
WeirdNeville said:
This.

Drive a car off of the forecourt, and you might as well bin a Grand. Any car. Even an appreciating a classic, because by starting it up, you've de-valued it.

I love buying cars at the end of their life cycle, I feel I've had great value for money motoring.

For example:
Nissan 200SX, Bought for £4,100, sold 2 years and 15,000 miles later for £3,300. That's £800 depreciation.
1988 Toyota MR2. Bought for £1,650, sold 2 years and 14,000 miles later for £1,650. biggrin
Just bought a leggy BMW 328i which is lovely for £700, I'll be happy to weigh it in for scrap if it fails it's next MOT in a big way, but I suspect it won't. I've already done 7,000 miles in it.

I can't understand anyone except the super-rich buying a new car - it just makes no financial sense whatsoever.

But please, keep doing it. I'll have your car in 12 years or so!
haha, you have the same idea a me. bought a leggy 328i touring 3 months ago, and always had the scrap value in the back of my head when buying it. even if it only makes a year or two I won't be to sad!

R1 Loon

26,988 posts

199 months

Saturday 20th November 2010
quotequote all
I get a brand new car every 3 years, current one is a BMW 335Ci, last one was an Audi S4. The good news for me is that my employers buy it, run it, insure it and maintain it for me all at zero cost to me. They even register it in my name so that I don't have to pay company car tax.

Beat that for depreciation.biggrin

Biker's Nemesis

41,017 posts

230 months

Saturday 20th November 2010
quotequote all
R1 Loon said:
I get a brand new car every 3 years, current one is a BMW 335Ci, last one was an Audi S4. The good news for me is that my employers buy it, run it, insure it and maintain it for me all at zero cost to me. They even register it in my name so that I don't have to pay company car tax.

Beat that for depreciation.biggrin
Well, how much will your 335Ci be worth in 3 years? I assume you've missed the point of this thread!


whoami

13,176 posts

262 months

Saturday 20th November 2010
quotequote all
R1 Loon said:
I get a brand new car every 3 years, current one is a BMW 335Ci, last one was an Audi S4. The good news for me is that my employers buy it, run it, insure it and maintain it for me all at zero cost to me. They even register it in my name so that I don't have to pay company car tax.

Beat that for depreciation.biggrin
What about benefit in kind?

R1 Loon

26,988 posts

199 months

Saturday 20th November 2010
quotequote all
whoami said:
R1 Loon said:
I get a brand new car every 3 years, current one is a BMW 335Ci, last one was an Audi S4. The good news for me is that my employers buy it, run it, insure it and maintain it for me all at zero cost to me. They even register it in my name so that I don't have to pay company car tax.

Beat that for depreciation.biggrin
What about benefit in kind?
Highlighted in bold above for you.

Biker's Nemesis said:
Well, how much will your 335Ci be worth in 3 years? I assume you've missed the point of this thread!
Don't know, don't care, I'll be too busy speccing up whatever new one I wantbiggrin

Biker's Nemesis

41,017 posts

230 months

Saturday 20th November 2010
quotequote all
R1 Loon said:
Don't know, don't care, I'll be too busy speccing up whatever new one I wantbiggrin
Thats not helping the poor sods that buy their own cars from new though is it.

whoami

13,176 posts

262 months

Saturday 20th November 2010
quotequote all
R1 Loon said:
whoami said:
R1 Loon said:
I get a brand new car every 3 years, current one is a BMW 335Ci, last one was an Audi S4. The good news for me is that my employers buy it, run it, insure it and maintain it for me all at zero cost to me. They even register it in my name so that I don't have to pay company car tax.

Beat that for depreciation.biggrin
What about benefit in kind?
Highlighted in bold above for you.

Biker's Nemesis said:
Well, how much will your 335Ci be worth in 3 years? I assume you've missed the point of this thread!
Don't know, don't care, I'll be too busy speccing up whatever new one I wantbiggrin
Yes I saw that.

However, you are being provided wirh a benefit that you are legally liable to pay no tax on?

No chance.

R1 Loon

26,988 posts

199 months

Saturday 20th November 2010
quotequote all
Biker's Nemesis said:
R1 Loon said:
Don't know, don't care, I'll be too busy speccing up whatever new one I wantbiggrin
Thats not helping the poor sods that buy their own cars from new though is it.
Let them eat cake.

Biker's Nemesis

41,017 posts

230 months

Saturday 20th November 2010
quotequote all
R1 Loon said:
Biker's Nemesis said:
R1 Loon said:
Don't know, don't care, I'll be too busy speccing up whatever new one I wantbiggrin
Thats not helping the poor sods that buy their own cars from new though is it.
Let them eat cake.
That'll come back to bite you on the bum.

CraigyMc

18,084 posts

258 months

Saturday 20th November 2010
quotequote all
whoami said:
you are being provided wirh a benefit that you are legally liable to pay no tax on?

No chance.
Tax fraud is possible, as is the possibility that he is somewhere with a loose tax regime?
C

Biker's Nemesis

41,017 posts

230 months

Saturday 20th November 2010
quotequote all
CraigyMc said:
whoami said:
you are being provided wirh a benefit that you are legally liable to pay no tax on?

No chance.
Tax fraud is possible, as is the possibility that he is somewhere with a loose tax regime?
C
England!

whoami

13,176 posts

262 months

Saturday 20th November 2010
quotequote all
CraigyMc said:
whoami said:
you are being provided wirh a benefit that you are legally liable to pay no tax on?

No chance.
Tax fraud is possible, as is the possibility that he is somewhere with a loose tax regime?
C
Which part of the UK is that?

R1 Loon

26,988 posts

199 months

Saturday 20th November 2010
quotequote all
whoami said:
Yes I saw that.

However, you are being provided wirh a benefit that you are legally liable to pay no tax on?

No chance.
I'm no Accountant, have a read of this

http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/manuals/eimanual/eim31500.h...

All I know is that I get a car allowance of x% per month that work guarantee will be net of tax & NI (covers me if rates rise), I then pick any car I want up to that cost per month.

If I opted out, I would get an amount of 35% of the allowance and that would be taxable.

whoami

13,176 posts

262 months

Sunday 21st November 2010
quotequote all
R1 Loon said:
whoami said:
Yes I saw that.

However, you are being provided with a benefit that you are legally liable to pay no tax on?

No chance.
I'm no Accountant, have a read of this

http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/manuals/eimanual/eim31500.h...

All I know is that I get a car allowance of x% per month that work guarantee will be net of tax & NI (covers me if rates rise), I then pick any car I want up to that cost per month.

If I opted out, I would get an amount of 35% of the allowance and that would be taxable.
So your employer is taking responsibility for not only providing you with a car (normal) but also the total tax bill of its employee too (much less normal)?

Lucky lad; make the most of it.