> Anyone that signs up, of their own free will, for a seven year loan on a depreciating asset has rocks in their head. For fucks sake.
Whether this is good or not is completely dependent on the loan interest rate, a person's cash flow situation, and what they will do with the free cash flow otherwise..
$50-100/mo saved due to lower 7y payments reinvested elsewhere could quite feasibly offset the higher cost associated with the (assumed) higher interest rate of the 7y loan.
And, according to the assumptions in financial/economic theory anyway, if you can get a loan at or below inflation rates, you're getting a 'discount' on the total price w/r/t paying 100% cash now
But yes, this should be made as a 'financing' decision, not an 'affordability' decision - if you can only afford the vehicle with 7y loan at all, and aren't taking the longer loan as an savings/investment decision among weighing the TCO you probably should be buying a cheaper one.
Whether this is good or not is completely dependent on the loan interest rate, a person's cash flow situation, and what they will do with the free cash flow otherwise..
$50-100/mo saved due to lower 7y payments reinvested elsewhere could quite feasibly offset the higher cost associated with the (assumed) higher interest rate of the 7y loan.
And, according to the assumptions in financial/economic theory anyway, if you can get a loan at or below inflation rates, you're getting a 'discount' on the total price w/r/t paying 100% cash now
But yes, this should be made as a 'financing' decision, not an 'affordability' decision - if you can only afford the vehicle with 7y loan at all, and aren't taking the longer loan as an savings/investment decision among weighing the TCO you probably should be buying a cheaper one.