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The Official Vehicle Financing Thread

Automotive Non-Technical topics... Just anything car related for the gear head in all of us

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kerwinishere
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Re: The Official Vehicle Financing Thread

Postby kerwinishere » June 27th, 2014, 3:01 pm

How old you is Kermit? :oops:

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Re: The Official Vehicle Financing Thread

Postby mitsu_chick941 » June 27th, 2014, 8:03 pm

Was a first time borrower

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Re: The Official Vehicle Financing Thread

Postby robbieg » June 27th, 2014, 9:13 pm

Notice some comments earlier in the thread saying "from a business perspective that it would make sense to take a loan for a vehicle, for cash flow reasons" and what not.

From a business perspective, it would make sense to finance a vehicle (take a loan), providing that said vehicle is (or is part of the process in) making the money.

If you are purchasing a vehicle for personal/recreational use, a loan may not be the best option - you are just giving away your hard earned money to the bank via interest (which i consider unnecessary risk). As previously said, dont put your hat where you cant reach it.

There is a huge difference in an asset and a luxury item from a business perspective.

Just my $0.02

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Re: The Official Vehicle Financing Thread

Postby Dizzy28 » June 27th, 2014, 10:23 pm

kerwinishere wrote:How old you is Kermit? :oops:


Old enough to be at 60% NCD for starters. Driving since 1998 and have 1 claim in that time. In 2000 had a accident where I was deemed wrong. Clean record since ( Knock on wood!!)

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DJ Q
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Re: The Official Vehicle Financing Thread

Postby DJ Q » June 27th, 2014, 11:42 pm

Dizzy28 wrote:You all have some horrible driving records or very young.
My Lancer in 2011 paid $6,700 on $189,950


Paid just over $3,000 on $82,000

Notice some comments earlier in the thread saying "from a business perspective that it would make sense to take a loan for a vehicle, for cash flow reasons" and what not.

From a business perspective, it would make sense to finance a vehicle (take a loan), providing that said vehicle is (or is part of the process in) making the money.

If you are purchasing a vehicle for personal/recreational use, a loan may not be the best option - you are just giving away your hard earned money to the bank via interest (which i consider unnecessary risk). As previously said, dont put your hat where you cant reach it.

There is a huge difference in an asset and a luxury item from a business perspective.

Just my $0.02


I guess the term business perspective is a bad term to use come to think about it. What I really mean is from a cash flow perspective. For the average person, it can actually work out cheaper in the long run if you buy a car with a loan rather than to continue traveling, or using their current vehicle to go about everyday tasks while attempting to save.

Now I'm not saying it's impossible, just saying it seems improbable for the vast majority to buy even a RORO March (~$48,000) cash. I, for instance, was spending sometimes $1,500 in just gas for the month. That's a loan payment right there. Had I attempted to save the money, I would have been spending way more in the process.

Also consider those who have children. It's much cheaper to drive and drop your child to school then you go to work than to travel to all these places. And for those who go straight to work and back, here's a personal calculation

Traveling to work: $4 one way ($8/day)

Car: $0.17/km
Distance: 12km
Cost: $2.04 ($4.08/day)

Now I'm fortunate in that I live & work walking distance from the bus route. So imagine if I had to take a car, then a maxi, then a car. Add children...

Traveling is expensive.

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Re: The Official Vehicle Financing Thread

Postby Ted_v2 » June 28th, 2014, 5:40 am

Maintenance on a vehicle is a lot Also

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DJ Q
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Re: The Official Vehicle Financing Thread

Postby DJ Q » June 28th, 2014, 10:32 am

That's why we've been suggesting to cycle vehicles 3-5 years.
October to now I've spent $360 in maintenance.

Going to rotate Tyres today and have to change my A/C belt.

In Toyota, brand new vehicles service every 6 months and a grade A (depending on the vehicle) is a few hundred dollars. It gets expensive when you cross 50,000km.

Also, don't forget everything posted in this thread are all opinions.

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vehicle loan

Postby sublime » August 11th, 2014, 4:07 pm

was just checking up, if you want to purchase a car from england and bring it down, which is the best institution that provides lending services to do such? i know most banks dont want to take risk with lending money for something they cant see physically until it reaches the country.

so just looking for any help on the matter.

thanks.

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Re: vehicle loan

Postby Gasmonkey » August 11th, 2014, 4:44 pm

Those Smaller finance company's might do it

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Re: vehicle loan

Postby mantis » August 11th, 2014, 9:09 pm

can u tell me what company i want a loan to buy a van don't have that cash

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Re: vehicle loan

Postby zoelikescheese » August 11th, 2014, 10:10 pm

sublime wrote:was just checking up, if you want to purchase a car from england and bring it down, which is the best institution that provides lending services to do such? i know most banks dont want to take risk with lending money for something they cant see physically until it reaches the country.

so just looking for any help on the matter.

thanks.

is England up in the sky? :|

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Re: vehicle loan

Postby LalChun » August 11th, 2014, 10:43 pm

Man want to bring a RR yes

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Re: vehicle loan

Postby Playboy123 » August 12th, 2014, 1:14 am

Man looking for some legit advice here but you fools asking sheit,

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Re: vehicle loan

Postby *$kїđž!™ » August 12th, 2014, 7:01 am

mantis wrote:can u tell me what company i want a loan to buy a van don't have that cash


Island Finance for starters..

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Re: vehicle loan

Postby turbosingh » August 12th, 2014, 10:08 am

*$kїđž!™ wrote:
mantis wrote:can u tell me what company i want a loan to buy a van don't have that cash


Island Finance for starters..

But that might be limited unless you have some form of security.

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Re: vehicle loan

Postby boxy » August 12th, 2014, 10:19 am

credit unions once u have a good relationship will give u a character loan for the deposit which the dealers ask for. when the vehicle arrives they will then give u the balance and transform it into a vehicle loan. go to your credit union and chat with the csr u will be surprised how helpful and catering they can be remember loans bring in revenue for them. The credit committee interview is another story it all comes down to if they choose to approve

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Re: vehicle loan

Postby ronsin1 » August 12th, 2014, 6:09 pm

What happened to the friendly neighborhood banks

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Re: vehicle loan

Postby rspann » August 12th, 2014, 6:44 pm

To get a loan, you need security ,they hold either cash or the vehicle as collateral. They can also use a property or another vehicle. They are not going to give out money unless they have the recourse of recovering their money. If the vehicle is not in your name as yet they cannot execute a mortgage bill of sale which is the legal instrument they use to recover the vehicle in case of default of payment. I hope this explanation helps.

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Re: vehicle loan

Postby ronsin1 » August 12th, 2014, 7:39 pm

But if one does not have some kind of capital why go through the risk and headache of going to England for a car supposed you end up getting screwed over you would be out of pocket and also have a loan to Pay

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Biggs3ne
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Re: vehicle loan

Postby Biggs3ne » August 13th, 2014, 7:39 am

*$kїđž!™ wrote:
mantis wrote:can u tell me what company i want a loan to buy a van don't have that cash


Island Finance for starters..


You may be sorry if you choose Island Finance...I heard that you end up paying almost 10 times what you borrow...

The best thing to do is get the loan through your credit union. If you don't, well then you will have to face the bank and their red tape

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Re: The Official Vehicle Financing Thread

Postby Skyline007 » August 25th, 2014, 9:26 am

https://www.facebook.com/VonnicEnterprises/timeline anyone ever ordered a roro car from this company?

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DJ Q
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Re: The Official Vehicle Financing Thread

Postby DJ Q » August 25th, 2014, 9:55 am

Their prices seem almost too good to be true.
Not questioning their legitimacy, but $72,500 for an Axio is ridiculously good.
$66,000 for a Y12 Wingroad is unheard of.

What can I say... go brave... let us know.

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Re: The Official Vehicle Financing Thread

Postby The_Honourable » June 20th, 2015, 4:07 pm

Learning a lot from this thread... take a bump!

Can anybody recommend good places to go to for vehicle financing?

Sharing experiences would be great.

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Re: The Official Vehicle Financing Thread

Postby Nicholaz » June 25th, 2015, 2:21 pm

The_Honourable wrote:Learning a lot from this thread... take a bump!

Can anybody recommend good places to go to for vehicle financing?

Sharing experiences would be great.

X2 :D

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Re: The Official Vehicle Financing Thread

Postby Turbo » July 28th, 2015, 3:21 pm

BUMP! Any updates?

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Re: The Official Vehicle Financing Thread

Postby JF.K » September 9th, 2018, 9:43 pm

DJ Q wrote:
boxy wrote:How does that car cycle thing work I always thought that the bank holds the title to the vehicle till it is paid off for. Very Informative i didnt know alot on stuff on Page 1


When you sell the car, the cheque will be made to the institution that holds the vehicle hostage.
They will then write you a cheque with anything that is over what is owed on the loan.
Bumping thread with a dumb question here...
If I'm buying a vehicle through my financial institution, how will I or the institution know if the vehicle is on a loan somewhere else?

In other words, how will we know if the seller is owing on the vehicle and will it matter?

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Re: The Official Vehicle Financing Thread

Postby *KRONIK* » September 9th, 2018, 10:27 pm

JF.K wrote:
DJ Q wrote:
boxy wrote:How does that car cycle thing work I always thought that the bank holds the title to the vehicle till it is paid off for. Very Informative i didnt know alot on stuff on Page 1


When you sell the car, the cheque will be made to the institution that holds the vehicle hostage.
They will then write you a cheque with anything that is over what is owed on the loan.
Bumping thread with a dumb question here...
If I'm buying a vehicle through my financial institution, how will I or the institution know if the vehicle is on a loan somewhere else?

In other words, how will we know if the seller is owing on the vehicle and will it matter?
They do a search on the vehicle
You can do one too to costs 500 and you get the results in 1 week.
They also do accident claim searches to make sure there are no other liens on the vehicle.

If its on a loan, the seller can get a settlement letter from the loan institutiion and you can take that letter to yours and they arrange for your loan to pay the seller's loan instituiton off instead.

There are terms and conditions for those kinds of purchases, so talk to your loan adviser about it 1st.

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Re: The Official Vehicle Financing Thread

Postby GMAN » September 13th, 2018, 8:53 am

Love this thread guys, knowledge is power and nothing better than sharing actual experiences to learn from so we can all make better financial decisions

Another thing that is a fact of life is that is a vehicle price , the MVT, Duty etc & VAT is all rolled up in there. When to take a loan for a vehicle you also borrowing money to pay for the MVT, Duty etc & VAT which goes back to the GOTT in one shot. So when you take a loan you basically taking a loan and paying interest on "dead money" also. Just a point of view

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Re: The Official Vehicle Financing Thread

Postby randolphinshan » September 14th, 2018, 6:05 am

GMAN wrote:Love this thread guys, knowledge is power and nothing better than sharing actual experiences to learn from so we can all make better financial decisions

Another thing that is a fact of life is that is a vehicle price , the MVT, Duty etc & VAT is all rolled up in there. When to take a loan for a vehicle you also borrowing money to pay for the MVT, Duty etc & VAT which goes back to the GOTT in one shot. So when you take a loan you basically taking a loan and paying interest on "dead money" also. Just a point of view


Tell us something we do not already know. Same applies to any loan, we buy things and pay Vat which hopefully goes to the state

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Re: The Official Vehicle Financing Thread

Postby adnj » September 14th, 2018, 8:24 am

JF.K wrote:
DJ Q wrote:
boxy wrote:How does that car cycle thing work I always thought that the bank holds the title to the vehicle till it is paid off for. Very Informative i didnt know alot on stuff on Page 1


When you sell the car, the cheque will be made to the institution that holds the vehicle hostage.
They will then write you a cheque with anything that is over what is owed on the loan.
Bumping thread with a dumb question here...
If I'm buying a vehicle through my financial institution, how will I or the institution know if the vehicle is on a loan somewhere else?

In other words, how will we know if the seller is owing on the vehicle and will it matter?
In addition, a lien is placed on the vehicle title. That lien appears on the registered copy that is used to transfer title.

You cannot get a vehicle loan without the registered copy being amended to include the lien holder.

You cannot transfer a vehicle without the title owners and lien holders issuing a letter of release or a signature on the transfer.

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