• Welcome to Mustang7G!

    If you're joining us from Mustang6G, then you may already have an account here!

    As long as you were registered on Mustang6G as of March 10, 2021 or earlier, then you can simply login here with the same username and password!

Years financing a S650

zstanny

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 16, 2022
Threads
8
Messages
478
Reaction score
634
Location
Huntsville, AL
Vehicle(s)
21 Mach 1 HP Prior: 20 SS 1LE, 17 GT350
Did you already do the full ppf?
In case anyone isn't aware of this, Ford ESP can now be purchased for up to 10 years. Is that a sign of financing terms to come?



It can very greatly for sure. I made the mistake of waiting 1 more year to sell my 2019 PP2 to order a Mach1. Obviously the market was way different a year ago with the highly inflated car market. Things have come back down now. Luckily it worked out well enough that I should be putting down 1/3 the price of the M1. Plus, having the money for taxes/plates and full vehicle PPF. I might just pick me up a 10 year warranty with it as well :like:.
Sponsored

 

dmcg940

Member
Joined
Jan 3, 2022
Threads
0
Messages
18
Reaction score
36
Location
Valrico, Florida
Vehicle(s)
21 Mustang GT Premium, Velocity Blue,94 Mustang GT
Since a new S650 GT is going to sell north of $45K, how many years will it take for a 1st time young Mustang buyer to afford to finance this car, and will the car hold up that long?
Radio financial advisor Bruce Williams used to say if you can't afford to pay for the car in 36 months or less, you can't afford the car. That sounds harsh, and maybe that number ought to be 48 months now. But I wouldn't go over that (and 36 is better.) That may mean you can't afford a Mustang. If so, I'm sorry, but no one gets all the desires of their heart just when they want to have them. Save your money, get a bigger down payment together, get a better job (or an additional job) or decide that an S550 (instead of an S650) will do for now.

Life lesson: NO CAR is worth breaking your credit and putting yourself into financial misery. Buy and enjoy what you can afford. That's the secret of being content.
 
OP
OP
lcbrownz

lcbrownz

Well-Known Member
Joined
Nov 10, 2013
Threads
20
Messages
582
Reaction score
158
Location
Virginia
Vehicle(s)
2007 Mustang Vert w/pony package
They are more designed for the impatient. The logic is "I can save for a down payment to get a 48/60 loan with manageable payments... orrrr I can get a 72/84 loan because I want the vehicle right now with payments in my range." These are usually the people that live *paycheck to paycheck" and as soon as they get freed up credit they see the need to utilize it. Unfortunately, most people don't look at long term financials anymore or are even taught it. Thus they never understand the longer your loan terms the more money you're throwing to the bank regardless of interest rate. We're raising a society of dependency unfortunately, but I'll stop before getting political.
What are manageable payments for a $45K Mustang GT on a 48/60 note? $955/48 -$789/60...with $5000 down. That's with an excellent credit score. That's too rich for my budget.
 

Longitude Zero

Active Member
Joined
May 1, 2020
Threads
0
Messages
26
Reaction score
20
Location
OKC
Vehicle(s)
2020 Mustang GT Premium, 2007 Mustang V6.
To avoid being upside down aka underwater, finance for the shortest possible time. 48 months is about the longest you can go with a 10%-15% down payment not be there from the start.
 


Nanashii

Well-Known Member
Joined
Nov 15, 2014
Threads
0
Messages
413
Reaction score
12
Location
US
Vehicle(s)
Mustang
Good video from savagegeese on several topics including financing (towards the end).

 

S650 GT

Banned
Banned
Banned
Joined
Sep 15, 2022
Threads
24
Messages
448
Reaction score
366
Location
Soviet Union
Vehicle(s)
Horse with Trailer
Can someone from the USA explain to me how your car prizes work?

If I see you are talking about a car that costs 45k is this with or without tax?

Becaise if we speak about a 45k car in Europe, it is 45k, nothing less and nothing more.

But with US, I'm always confused.
 

OppoLock

RWD Addict
Joined
Apr 21, 2014
Threads
11
Messages
3,131
Reaction score
1,574
Location
FL
Vehicle(s)
2015 GT, 2020 GT350
Can someone from the USA explain to me how your car prizes work?

If I see you are talking about a car that costs 45k is this with or without tax?

Becaise if we speak about a 45k car in Europe, it is 45k, nothing less and nothing more.

But with US, I'm always confused.
Unlike the EU and UK that requires VAT to be included, ours is listed separately. In the US, car sales tax varies by state, from 0-8% with most states probably landing around 5-6%. So a 45k car is realistically 47-48k here.

To add further confusion, you can’t simply get a better tax rate by buying your car from a different state with lower/zero tax. Your tax is based on you register your car (ie where you live).
 

Onewolf

Member
Joined
Dec 3, 2020
Threads
0
Messages
9
Reaction score
4
Location
East Tennessee
Vehicle(s)
2022 GT Premium Coupe
Unlike the EU and UK that requires VAT to be included, ours is listed separately. In the US, car sales tax varies by state, from 0-8% with most states probably landing around 5-6%. So a 45k car is realistically 47-48k here.

To add further confusion, you can’t simply get a better tax rate by buying your car from a different state with lower/zero tax. Your tax is based on you register your car (ie where you live).
Here in the US of A the most important $ number is the "out the door" price. This will include all the stupid dealer fees, registration/titling costs as well as sales taxes. Where I live in Tennessee the sales tax on vehicles is 7%.

Another thing is that some dealers are willing to discount significantly off MSRP, but others discount very little (or even include "market value" BS additions). I tried to negotiate a good deal here in the Knoxville area, but the dealers were not willing to play ball. At all. I ended up buying a '22 GT Premium from Ourisman Ford in Manassas Virginia for about 11% under MSRP.

I financed it using Ford Credit for 48 months @2.9% for $528/month. But I put $24K down so I shouldn't have to worry about being 'under water'.
 

Evo1986

Well-Known Member
Joined
Aug 8, 2022
Threads
12
Messages
492
Reaction score
395
Location
Germany
Vehicle(s)
Ford Mustang GT - 55 years edition Kona Blue AT
Here in the US of A the most important $ number is the "out the door" price. This will include all the stupid dealer fees, registration/titling costs as well as sales taxes. Where I live in Tennessee the sales tax on vehicles is 7%.

Another thing is that some dealers are willing to discount significantly off MSRP, but others discount very little (or even include "market value" BS additions). I tried to negotiate a good deal here in the Knoxville area, but the dealers were not willing to play ball. At all. I ended up buying a '22 GT Premium from Ourisman Ford in Manassas Virginia for about 11% under MSRP.

I financed it using Ford Credit for 48 months @2.9% for $528/month. But I put $24K down so I shouldn't have to worry about being 'under water'.
You put 24K down? Wouldn't it make sense to buy the guy entirely or do you guys get the down payment back at the end of the finance term?

Here in Germany, once you do a down payment, your monthly rates go down, but the money is gone.
 

Onewolf

Member
Joined
Dec 3, 2020
Threads
0
Messages
9
Reaction score
4
Location
East Tennessee
Vehicle(s)
2022 GT Premium Coupe
You put 24K down? Wouldn't it make sense to buy the guy entirely or do you guys get the down payment back at the end of the finance term?

Here in Germany, once you do a down payment, your monthly rates go down, but the money is gone.
Yes, but the cash isn't 'gone' it's sitting in the car. :)

Putting $24K down means I have that much more equity in the car such that I don't need to worry about being upside down if I decide to sell it or trade it in. Also, my monthly payment is $528/month rather than $934/month if I put only 10% down and I pay half as much in interest charges over the life of the loan.

I chose to get the Ford auto loan at 2.9% because I'm also building a house with a construction loan at 5.9% so I'm using the 'extra' cash to reduce the construction loan since it's a MUCH higher interest rate.
 

Skye

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jul 29, 2022
Threads
0
Messages
822
Reaction score
1,073
Location
≈39N
Vehicle(s)
"Skye" Mach1 N2144
Last edited:

shogun32

Banned
Banned
Banned
Joined
Feb 7, 2019
Threads
32
Messages
4,316
Reaction score
886
Location
Northern VA
Vehicle(s)
2019 GT+PP, SS+1LE, 2020 F150
Most average "new car" buyers only care about "what's it going to cost me per month and for how long " just to drive a new Mustang off the lot. None of that other stuff matters to young new buyers (21 and below).
their parents failed them. Any age person has no business buying a "toy" car if it means violating ages-old rules on debt loads. They are "ages-old" and "rules" for a damn good reason.

But I am looking forward to the rising tsunami of defaults and repossessions that is rapidly coming on-shore. Lenders will be desperate to secure ANY recoverable value and with no bids, the prices will crater and unwind the last 15+ years of insane valuations.

PS. I still won't be buying a S650 no matter how cheap it is. :)
 

seanuf99

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jun 1, 2022
Threads
0
Messages
91
Reaction score
155
Location
USA
Vehicle(s)
21 GT
their parents failed them. Any age person has no business buying a "toy" car if it means violating ages-old rules on debt loads. They are "ages-old" and "rules" for a damn good reason.

But I am looking forward to the rising tsunami of defaults and repossessions that is rapidly coming on-shore. Lenders will be desperate to secure ANY recoverable value and with no bids, the prices will crater and unwind the last 15+ years of insane valuations.

PS. I still won't be buying a S650 no matter how cheap it is. :)
Slight correction...Parents AND education system failed them.
Sponsored

 
 




Top