Fuel costs

Author
Discussion

Vipers

Original Poster:

32,900 posts

229 months

Friday 13th May 2011
quotequote all
Right place for this, I don't know.

I was just gobsmacked, I have been logging in an exell spread sheet every time I fill up for the past 10 years or so.

My current spreadsheet is for my Volvo S80, logged since I purchased it Sept 2004.

To date I have spent £10,773 on petrol yikes plus all the other expenditure, tax, insurance, MOT, servicing, comes to a staggering £23,058.

Now if I hadn't bought the car, (cost £17,000), could be £40,000 better off.




frown



red rider

208 posts

193 months

Friday 13th May 2011
quotequote all
And fitter

Jasandjules

69,945 posts

230 months

Friday 13th May 2011
quotequote all
Well, look at it this way - my train ticket is 3k. So since 2004 that's around 20k (it goes up a little each year of course).. And that doesn't account for car parking (£30-50pcm). And then I don't live within 10ft of the train station, so I have to drive there as well........

Which makes your car a bargain......

Mr GrimNasty

8,172 posts

171 months

Friday 13th May 2011
quotequote all
Vipers said:
Now if I hadn't bought the car, (cost £17,000), could be £40,000 better off.
No you wouldn't. Not if you lived the same life style you lived using the car. You would still have to get to work, out to the restaurant etc., use trains, taxis, pay someone to do all the stuff you did yourself with the car. I strongly suspect you would be worse off.

Zwoelf

25,867 posts

207 months

Friday 13th May 2011
quotequote all
Vipers said:
Now if I hadn't bought the car, I could be £40,000 better off.
How many miles have you covered in that time?

How much would covering the same distance have cost you without owning a car at all? Without walking everywhere, it won't be £40k in your back pocket. wink

ETA: £40,000 over 80 months = £500pm.

That's not bad at all. It's not too hard to pay more company car tax and fuel benefit than that for a "free" car and "free" fuel over the same sort of period.

Edited by Zwoelf on Friday 13th May 21:33

soad

32,914 posts

177 months

Friday 13th May 2011
quotequote all
Erm- it sure feels steep cost-wise over the years, but that's expected shirley? Don't let it stress ya biggrin

gareth.e

2,071 posts

190 months

Friday 13th May 2011
quotequote all
10k since 2004 isn't that much in petrol at all...

deveng

3,917 posts

181 months

Friday 13th May 2011
quotequote all
I've just totted it up and I've spent more than £20k on rent since I moved out of my parents.

Just think if I'd lived in a cardboard box all that time.... etc etc

That's why you have a job, because you spend money on food rent car etc etc.

deveng

3,917 posts

181 months

Friday 13th May 2011
quotequote all
Vipers said:
Right place for this, I don't know.

I was just gobsmacked, I have been logging in an exell spread sheet every time I fill up for the past 10 years or so.

My current spreadsheet is for my Volvo S80, logged since I purchased it Sept 2004.

To date I have spent £10,773 on petrol yikes plus all the other expenditure, tax, insurance, MOT, servicing, comes to a staggering £23,058.

Now if I hadn't bought the car, (cost £17,000), could be £40,000 better off.




frown
£2.3K a year in motoring? my next service is going to cost that much.

sinizter

3,348 posts

187 months

Friday 13th May 2011
quotequote all
Since 2004 ?

I've spent more on petrol since 2008.

And I'm sure there are people who have spent even more.

Doesn't seem bad at all.

eldar

21,800 posts

197 months

Friday 13th May 2011
quotequote all
Try having kids. Just don't keep a spreadsheet, that is too depressing.

Vipers

Original Poster:

32,900 posts

229 months

Friday 13th May 2011
quotequote all
Mr GrimNasty said:
Vipers said:
Now if I hadn't bought the car, (cost £17,000), could be £40,000 better off.
No you wouldn't. Not if you lived the same life style you lived using the car. You would still have to get to work, out to the restaurant etc., use trains, taxis, pay someone to do all the stuff you did yourself with the car. I strongly suspect you would be worse off.
Yes but being a mature chappie, I have a free bus pass, biggrin



smile

Council Baby

19,741 posts

191 months

Friday 13th May 2011
quotequote all
Christ... the 350z cost me all in c.£20k in 2 years, 13,700 miles. Including petrol, parking congestion charge, servicing, a few repairs, tax, insurance and depreciation. Roughly £6,300 was petrol.

Vipers

Original Poster:

32,900 posts

229 months

Friday 13th May 2011
quotequote all
eldar said:
Try having kids. Just don't keep a spreadsheet, that is too depressing.
Had 3 wonderfull children, daughter 40, just given us a grandson 8 weeks ago, born in Sydney so he is an OZ, one 37, gave us a granddaugher 3 years ago, born in Vancouver, so she is Canadian, and my son 29, who is now off the hook as first sister had given birth to a boy, so our surname will continue (there are not many Goff's around - check your local phonebook) and agree they are bloody expensive to say the least.

Bottom line is, they were expensive, and STILL are expensive.




smile

Ray Luxury-Yacht

8,910 posts

217 months

Friday 13th May 2011
quotequote all
I had my little Ford Fiesta converted to run on LPG as I was doing loadsa miled commuting to London and back, about 160 miles a day.

When I sold the car with 155,000 miles on the clock (bought with 25,000 miles showing), I worked out the total consumption for 130,000 miles.

If I had left it just running on normal unleaded, my fuel costs would have been about £20,000.

I actually spent just £12,000 on LPG.

The conversion was £1,500, so I saved £6,500 in fuel yikes

Food for thought.


deveng

3,917 posts

181 months

Saturday 14th May 2011
quotequote all
Ray Luxury-Yacht said:
I had my little Ford Fiesta converted to run on LPG as I was doing loadsa miled commuting to London and back, about 160 miles a day.

When I sold the car with 155,000 miles on the clock (bought with 25,000 miles showing), I worked out the total consumption for 130,000 miles.

If I had left it just running on normal unleaded, my fuel costs would have been about £20,000.

I actually spent just £12,000 on LPG.

The conversion was £1,500, so I saved £6,500 in fuel yikes

Food for thought.
yeah but had your circumstances changed again, you could have been £1500 out of pocket struggling to sell a converted fiesta.

Life's just not that black and white

Jasandjules

69,945 posts

230 months

Saturday 14th May 2011
quotequote all
Ray Luxury-Yacht said:
The conversion was £1,500, so I saved £6,500 in fuel yikes
Or, about 5k in tax..............