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| General Discussion Please read our Forum Rules before posting Feel free to talk about anything and everything about money. |
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Hey guys,
A little over 2 years ago, I purchased a truck and financed almost all of it. To make matters worse, we traded in another car that we owed money on and it made the truck cost more than it was worth. I still owe more than it's worth. I purchased it because my job was about a 15 min drive away. Since then, my job has relocated to right next to our house. I'm really only driving my truck 4 miles a day now. Since it's about a 15 min walk, and with rising gas prices (the lowest here is $4.69), I've decided to start walking to work. We also plan on moving across country within the next 1-2 years so needless to say, this truck is a waste now. I have searched and tried to see my options about getting out of the loan, but it doesn't look like there is much hope. I could sell it for what it's worth now and eat the extra $4,000. Although I wouldn't like to do that. But even without paying gas/insurance/maintanence I would be saving around $200/month. I know it's not the greatest situation to be in, but it's not a matter of affording it. I can definitely afford it, I just don't want to. If anyone has any ideas or tips, please let me know. |
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Do you actually owe more on the truck than it is worth, or is it that what you owe on the truck plus what you still owe on the previous car adds up to more than the truck is worth? If it is the latter, I'd sell the truck and just pull from savings to pay off the difference that got rolled into the loan from the other car (assuming you have the funds to do that).
In the meantime, since you are hardly driving it, gas and maintenance costs are minimal. Have you looked into reducing the insurance coverage? Call your agent. They may be able to cut your rate when you explain how little you drive the vehicle.
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Steve * Despite the high cost of living, it remains very popular. * Why should I pay for my daughter's education when she already knows everything? * There are no shortcuts to anywhere worth going. |
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I am sure there is no easy answer, car loans are tough.
One suggestion though would be if you do own a home to see if you have enough equity in the house to get a home equity loan. The home equity loan will be at a lower finance rate than the car loan and you may be able to consolidate other bills at the same time, making it one lower monthly payment, Remember, car payments are the instruments of the poor to keep them poor. Rich people don't have car payments, that is part of the reason why they are rich. |
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Don't feel so bad I have 2 truck loans. One is an 08 chevy silverado at $463.01 for 72 months. I bought that in april of 08 at 2.9%. Then my husband who works for the state of PA bought an 08 Ford F150 in September for $457.63 for 72 months at 8.4%. Want to talk about loan hell. Now he might be getting laid off. We've been trying to sell his truck but when you owe $24,000 on it no one wants it.
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