| You grossly increase the chance of a lemon with your strategy. Why would anyone sell a near-new car for 30%+ off *unless* they knew the vehicle is crap? -------- Buying lightly used (~3 year or ~5 year) cars is likely the superior strategy. There's a set of rich buyers who want to keep up with the latest trends. This leads them to leasing vehicles for 2, 3, or so years. Other times, they have enough income that they can just buy new entirely but sell within 5 years when nicer technology comes out. There's likely nothing wrong with a 3-year-old car. Its just that the lease is up so they're moving on. ----------- In contrast, think of the kind of person who buys new at like $40,000 and then turns around and immediately tries to sell the vehicle 6 months later for $25,000. There's probably something very wrong with that car. Anyone selling just a few months after buying is someone who actively regrets their decision to buy. |
Change of life. New kids, divorce, relocation to a city, got a UTV that needs something to tow it, lost a job and need the cash, died, started carpooling, etc.
If you don’t need a car anymore and are very certain you won’t, there is no point in dragging out the ownership. Taking a big loss immediately is better than waiting 2 years and also paying insurance and registration the entire time.
Many states have lemon laws and actual garbage has to be taken back by the dealers after X number of repairs. The people selling at a steep loss don’t have a lemon in those states.
You’re a lot less likely to get a lemon buying near new than you imply.