
Let's divide the car-buying universe into two camps: those who keep a car until it drops, and those who think a new car will change their lives.
To the first, a round of applause. There's nothing short of the bus that's cheaper than keeping a car until it crumbles into a pile of rust. Almost any car can be nursed to 200,000 miles without endangering your life, and even a new engine is cheaper than all but the cheapest used cars.
If you're in a drive-until-the-muffler-is-dragging wannabe, read on. We'll look at ways to keep your car on the road longer and realistically weigh the costs of upgrading. I'd love to keep my old car, but …
It no longer fits my life.
I'm nervous driving an older car.
The repair costs more than the car is worth. A $1,500 engine rebuild that keeps your '83 Toyota on the road still makes good financial sense. It's at this point, however, that all but the flintiest drivers begin to think about upgrading.
Which brings us to our next question:
Am I ready for a newer car?
Your first step is to do nothing except write a check to yourself in the amount you're thinking you can afford every month. Put aside a car payment every month for three months (long enough for at least one of life's little emergencies to crop up).
- How much did it hurt? If you skimped at all on other bills or shorted the amount of the payment, you're not ready.
- Would I have enough left over to pay for insurance and licensing fees each year?
- Would I pay this much every month for the car that's in my driveway already? Sooner or later, every new car becomes an old car, and you'll feel about the next car just the way you do about your old clunker.
- Would I rather have the cash? Our typical car payment, $475, adds up to more than $1,400 in just three short months. Perhaps you'd prefer to get a tan in Mexico and limp along with ol' Betsy another year.
- Could I continue to save for another year and simply pay cash? Six grand would buy any of hundreds of reliable used models. Save for two years and you're approaching new-car territory, if your old car will fetch a few thousand.
If the craving for a shinier car hasn't passed in three months, at least you begin the shopping process with a few months' worth of car payments and a more realistic idea of the hit your wallet will take.
Side note: Never skimp on maintenance
Pay special attention to the things that will cost you a fortune if they break. That means making regular oil changes, tire rotations and transmission tune-ups, even if the car is running fine. Timing belts, for example, are spendy at $600 or more, and replacing one for no other reason than that the odometer has turned 90,000 miles might seem wasteful. But let one break and you'll find that repairing bent valves could cost you three times that. Replacing torn CV boots, those plastic housings that keep grime and grit out of the car's constant-velocity joints, costs about a third as much as a CV joint repair.
(If your owner's manual is long gone, MSN Autos has a free online service,
My Car, that tracks your car's service schedule. [click on the link]http://autos.msn.com/everyday/everyday.aspx?src=LeftNav)[article source] Des Toups is senior editor at MSN Money in Seattle.
Updated Nov. 18, 2009
http://articles.moneycentral.msn.com/SavingandDebt/SaveonaCar/KeepYourOldClunkerOrBuyANewCar.aspx