Although newer cars are great since they have low mileage/no rust, I would recommend anyone who's truly on a tight budget go for an older vehicle - specifically a 2005-2012 Toyota Avalon. I bought a 2007 for $3k, put $2k worth of work into it, and now I have a super reliable car with a powerful V6 and tons of nice little features since its a limited. I don't have a car payment, and it is cheap to fuel/insure, with the only downside being no AWD system. It certainly doesn't get the gas mileage of a newer corolla, but its still much less of an investment for an arguably better vehicle if you find one in good shape.
definitely i would for sure say used cars are the way to go they already depreciate in value and you would definitely get your moneys worth especially if you go for toyota and honda. honestly i am not really worried about the cars not having AWD because if you have winter tyres u would have absolutely nothing to worry about. thank you for your insightful comment
Not bad at all for 2019
not at all quite impressive honestly
Although newer cars are great since they have low mileage/no rust, I would recommend anyone who's truly on a tight budget go for an older vehicle - specifically a 2005-2012 Toyota Avalon. I bought a 2007 for $3k, put $2k worth of work into it, and now I have a super reliable car with a powerful V6 and tons of nice little features since its a limited. I don't have a car payment, and it is cheap to fuel/insure, with the only downside being no AWD system. It certainly doesn't get the gas mileage of a newer corolla, but its still much less of an investment for an arguably better vehicle if you find one in good shape.
definitely i would for sure say used cars are the way to go they already depreciate in value and you would definitely get your moneys worth especially if you go for toyota and honda.
honestly i am not really worried about the cars not having AWD because if you have winter tyres u would have absolutely nothing to worry about.
thank you for your insightful comment