English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

also If two people co signed it. Im just wondering

2007-02-11 06:38:03 · 4 answers · asked by Jay F 1 in Cars & Transportation Buying & Selling

im not trying to buy one.
im just asking.

how much is to down, finance, and lease one

2007-02-11 06:48:42 · update #1

I make about 64k, -7k for tax, - 22k for bill food and stuff. that makes 35k a year for whatevers. I have 140k in the bank.
ive saved up since i was 19 and now im 23. I still pretty young...hahaha.
I have 04 350z and might sell it.

my job
I was a LVN 2yrs and now im a RN 2 yrs

2007-02-12 12:10:33 · update #2

i have no girlfriend so im not in a hurry to buy a house or get married maybe when im 28 or 29, so it give me alot of time to save up again...lol

2007-02-12 12:33:42 · update #3

4 answers

Here ya go....this is where I bought mine:

http://www.fwash.com/fwash/new-f430-fin.htm

They can offer you many options.

2007-02-12 04:31:05 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

An F430 Coupe will run about $120-130k. This will give you about $10k more in sales tax, and a similar amount in license fees, and possible other luxury taxes on top of that. All said, figure $145k is probably a fair figure to consider as an "out the door" price.

If you could finance a traidtional car loan, and put down about $35k, you'd pay about $2800/month on a 48 month loan (figuring 7%). However, regardless of how many co-signers you line up, your odds of lining up a traditional auto loan for this amount is probably not realistic. Ferrari may offer some commerical credit options as well as it's normal leasing, but your real option would be to use an already established credit line (which you probably have if you are looking for a $145k car), or to secure a loan against something else (probably real estate or investment holdings). In both of these cases you should be able to get a better rate than you would with a car loan (though over a similar term, would still be facing $2600 or so a month unless you could offer up more principle up front).

2007-02-12 18:28:13 · answer #2 · answered by Paul S 7 · 0 0

It isn't like financing a Kia. Either you can afford one or you can't. Banks aren't going to lend money on a car like this unless it is part of a larger investment and cash flow strategy if you are really rich.

2007-02-11 14:59:25 · answer #3 · answered by Confused 3 · 0 0

If you are worried about the answer to this question, you can't afford one.

2007-02-11 14:46:19 · answer #4 · answered by Who Am I 4 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers