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What are all the costs associated with getting car?
Hi I'm planning on getting a car (first time). I'm thinking of getting it on finance. I'd like to know all the costs associated with this. I know I'll have to pay the monthly finance, petrol, road tax, insurance, MOT, servicing and repair. Are there any other costs I've missed please? Also, does the Smart Fortwo Cabrio have no road tax?
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That pretty much covers it.Hi I'm planning on getting a car (first time). I'm thinking of getting it on finance. I'd like to know all the costs associated with this. I know I'll have to pay the monthly finance, petrol, road tax, insurance, MOT, servicing and repair. Are there any other costs I've missed please? Also, does the Smart Fortwo Cabrio have no road tax?
As far as "road tax" is concerned then it depends on the model/engine you're referring to.0 -
Some dealers are doing a 'Just add fuel'
Peugeot are offering this: https://offers.peugeot.co.uk/just-add-fuel
No petrol, diesel or alternative fuel car registered on or after 1st April 2017 is free from vehicle excise duty. Any car registered up to 31st March 2017 that produces up to 100g/Km CO2 has free VED (road tax). 101-110 is £20 111-120 is £30 annually. Then it jumps to £125 for the next band.
Internal combustion vehicles registered on or after 1 April 2017 are charged at £145 and upwards.
https://www.theaa.com/driving-advice/driving-costs/car-tax
I prefer to own my own vehicle, many of my work colleagues have them on finance / lease / pcp
There's pros and cons of both.
My 2016 Peugeot 108 5dr (current value £5000) costs me £180 annually for insurance (I'm 46), £40 for an MOT test, £0 Road Tax, £90 for a service at a local garage (not a main dealer) £40 breakdown cover annually
I do 4000 miles a year and cost that at 10p per mile for petrol. £400
Total for 1 years motoring (excluding depreciation in value of car) and any unexpected repairs.
£750
This works out more cost effective than finance for me.0 -
The biggest ‘hidden’ cost is depreciation.0
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[quote=[Deleted User];76688280]The biggest ‘hidden’ cost is depreciation.[/QUOTE]
True: A vehicle loses, on average, 50% of its new list price in the first 3 years. If you're buying a used car get a 3 year old one. After 3 years the depreciation slows down.
The list price on my car new was £11'500, I bought it at 3.5 years old from a dealer for £5110 with 18k miles.
If you keep a vehicle in good condition you can mitigate the depreciation.0 -
"No road tax" doesn't mean "You don't need to do anything about road tax." You do - you still need to have the car taxed at all times it's on the road, and if ever it's uninsured or without MOT come renewal time, you need to SORN it.Also, does the Smart Fortwo Cabrio have no road tax?
It's just that taxing it costs £0. But you do still need to do it.0 -
You didn't mention breakdown cover (although alembicbassman did).The comments I post are my personal opinion. While I try to check everything is correct before posting, I can and do make mistakes, so always try to check official information sources before relying on my posts.0
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[quote=[Deleted User];76688280]The biggest ‘hidden’ cost is depreciation.[/QUOTE]
That's effectively what the cost of the finance is, these days.If it sticks, force it.
If it breaks, well it wasn't working right anyway.0 -
Washing it and putting things in it: air fresheners, fluffy dice, sat nav, decent tunes etc.0
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We have a Smart for2 cabrio and love it! 14plate and the tax is £20 a year I think. One thing to be aware of is avoid the fuel saving MHB as it is problematic. There was a major upgrade in 2015 and the later cars are much more comfortable. The access to the boot in the cabrio is height restricted so not so convenient as the coupe. We have got two bales of straw in the coupe but can't get even one in the cabrio.0
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