The Depreciation Argument
A new car loses 20-25%% of its value the moment you drive it off the lot. By year 3, it has lost roughly 40-50%% of its value. A 3-year-old car has already absorbed the steepest depreciation, which means the next owner loses far less in value over the same ownership period.
See how fast your car loses value.
Open Depreciation Calculator →When New Makes Sense
- You plan to keep it 7-10+ years (amortizing depreciation over more years)
- You want the latest safety technology and fuel efficiency
- You want a factory warranty and no unknown history
- You qualify for 0%% or very low APR financing promotions
- You want a specific configuration (color, trim, options)
When Used Makes Sense
- Budget is a primary concern (same car for 30-50%% less)
- You are buying a model known for reliability (Toyota, Honda, Lexus)
- You are comfortable with a pre-purchase inspection
- You want lower insurance premiums (older cars cost less to insure)
- You are a first-time buyer or young driver
The Sweet Spot: 2-3 Years Old
A car that is 2-3 years old with 20,000-40,000 miles is often the best value in the market. The steepest depreciation is done. It may still have remaining factory warranty. It is recent enough to have modern safety and infotainment features. And the price is typically 30-40%% less than a comparable new model.
See how much car you can afford.
Open Affordability Calculator →The financially optimal strategy is to buy a 2-3 year old reliable car and keep it for 7-10 years. You avoid the worst depreciation, pay less in insurance, and spread the cost over many years. It is not glamorous, but it is how people who are good with money buy cars.