Does nobody want 987 Caymans?
Discussion
Porsche911R said:
the £500 tax has killed the cheap end of the market on sales, cmoose will say not, but people with £15k to spend will not pay out £500 to tax it.
I think new rules come back in 2017 for older cars and flat rates which might boost 987.1 2006 to 2009 Cayman S sales again.
Do the 2017 rules make any difference to cars registered before April 2017? My understanding is that they don't, but perhaps I got that wrong.I think new rules come back in 2017 for older cars and flat rates which might boost 987.1 2006 to 2009 Cayman S sales again.
My 2005 Boxster S gets the exemption from the last change, and I do think it would make a bit of difference if I was going to sell it. £280 is a little more acceptable than £490 as these cars start to hit the £10k mark. Going down to the £140 flat rate would be welcome!
The new scheme is a massive disincentive to buy a new car at £40k+, so it will be interesting to see what that does to the market for these cars going forward.
river_rat said:
Does anyone seriously NOT buy a Porsche because the road tax is £490 instead of £280!
That's 3 tanks of fuel in difference over the year (not to mention all the other associated costs with running a Porsche).
Yes but from a point of principal rather than the difference in cost. We're asked to pay more for a car that will be used a lot less than a daily driver and therefore will emit less greenhouse gases over a given period of time than a lower emitting, lower taxed car. We all know that little, if any, of the revenue raised goes back into the roads or to pay for other ways of reducing emissions. Therefore it's simply a stealth tax.That's 3 tanks of fuel in difference over the year (not to mention all the other associated costs with running a Porsche).
river_rat said:
Does anyone seriously NOT buy a Porsche because the road tax is £490 instead of £280!
That's 3 tanks of fuel in difference over the year (not to mention all the other associated costs with running a Porsche).
I would have thought that it might sway some people.That's 3 tanks of fuel in difference over the year (not to mention all the other associated costs with running a Porsche).
Looking at it properly as you have, it is pretty much irrelevant, but I look at it as getting all of my servicing for free in comparison to having a 2006 or newer car.
Certainly, the new tax rates adds to the case against me replacing mine with a new one. Tax increase from £280 to £450, pus a big hit in the first year, depreciation up from £1,500 to £8-10,000, servicing cost doubles, insurance probably goes up significantly as well.
river_rat said:
Does anyone seriously NOT buy a Porsche because the road tax is £490 instead of £280!
That's 3 tanks of fuel in difference over the year (not to mention all the other associated costs with running a Porsche).
I've been making this point for some time now but usually get shouted-down by the 'run it on a shoestring' brigade.That's 3 tanks of fuel in difference over the year (not to mention all the other associated costs with running a Porsche).
olly22n said:
I'd baulk at paying £500 per year and would actively go for a car in the cheaper tax band if i could.
Agreed, you kind of take it on the chin with a £30k plus car but who wants a £15k car that costs £500 per year just to tax it, add in insurance and a service and its £2k before you've even driven it.Still a lot of sports car for £15k though?
Budflicker said:
olly22n said:
I'd baulk at paying £500 per year and would actively go for a car in the cheaper tax band if i could.
Agreed, you kind of take it on the chin with a £30k plus car but who wants a £15k car that costs £500 per year just to tax it, add in insurance and a service and its £2k before you've even driven it.Gassing Station | Boxster/Cayman | Top of Page | What's New | My Stuff


