I believe the average amount of miles a car is driven is between 12-15k. So it depends on the year of the car.
2007-05-25 14:50:51
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answer #1
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answered by Jack O 6
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This very debatable. I know a guy that never buy a truck with less than 100,000 miles. He looks it over and can tell if it been well maintained and feels he can get a good buy with those high miles.
My last car was a 1992 Ford Taurus. It had 150,000 miles and the lady say the Transmission had stopped working. I paid $50 for it, changed the filter and fluid in the transmission and drove it for 3 years. I sold it last week for $100 with 168,000 miles.
But, for a person that may not know a lot about cars, maybe 50,000 miles or less, but, that not really mean you get a good car. If it has not been maintained well, it may be in worse condition than a car with 100,000 miles that been taken care of and not driven like a dog sled.
So, if you need a good dependable vehicle, you look under the hood and if there wires hanging around with no place to go, or where the battery sit is all rusted out, it may not be a good deal, even if it clean. Sometimes you look close and a dealer will have spray painted over the rust, you can tell if you look, it all rough looking. If, you can find, a trustworthy friend that know a little and can help you look around.
2007-05-25 15:03:33
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answer #2
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answered by Snaglefritz 7
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The answer to this question depends on the year, make and model of a vehicle. It also depends on how well the previous owner(s) took care of it.
Knowing that the average amount of mileage put on a vehicle in a year is 15,000 miles anything less is great and anything more is not so great! But really some cars can run excellent with high mileage.
2007-05-25 16:17:35
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answer #3
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answered by burberribunni 5
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Your brokers counsel would have been incorrect. according to hazard it problematical 61k in 08 ? Sounds a hazard. What does the front of the call say ? what share miles at what date ? And till you could tutor that the corporate rolled the miles decrease back, you have not got a case. The mileage written in on the smog verify wasnt below oath and those people make blunders. Making concerns worse, whether you probably did win, you may in user-friendly terms win $800 in substitute for the motor vehicle. there's a draw back to cheating the state out of revenues tax. till you bypass into court docket and admit to tax fraud. (Do you particularly need to confess your a criminal to the decide ? Tax fraud) What did the bill of sale say approximately mileage ? What related to the decrease back of the call ? Why cant you touch the corporate ? in case you cant touch him, you need to no longer sue him the two and in case you probably did and won, how might you assemble ? Im afraid you're an proprietor. yet, Im additionally unsure the odometer replaced into relatively rolled decrease back the two. If the odometer replaced into incorrect, your bill of sale and the decrease back of the call could tutor it. (verify here if the mileage listed isn't superb) If he checked the area that the mileage is erroneous,aka genuine miles unknown, what it reads doesnt relatively count quantity.
2016-11-05 09:57:45
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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More than15,000 miles per year for the age of the car is a bad sign. Too many miles put on it too fast. From 10,000 to 14,000 miles per year is average. If the car has been well maintained, it should be OK. Less than 10,000 miles per year average is ideal. Conservatively used. Of course, lots of other factors weigh heavily into any decision to buy a used car.
2007-05-25 16:41:30
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answer #5
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answered by David P 1
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WOW, good question but there are not any good answers. With proper care a vehicle with 150,000 miles is still good to go. I have two with well over 200,000 and going strong. Conversely, 100,000 with poor maintenance and the vehicle may look great but not worth owning. Might be a good investment to have a good mechanic look over your prospective vehicle, many do this for a small fee.
2007-05-25 14:50:40
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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OD reading is a contributor to over all condition of a vehicle so it is important but it changes from vehicle to vehicle and engine to engine. Kelly Blue Book posts the price and the expected mileage for each vehicle - so use it - I found it to be very helpful. the Web site is Kellybluebook.com
2007-05-29 13:41:06
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answer #7
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answered by pilot 5
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Honda or Toyota = Higher mileage is mostly ok.
Ford= Low mileage
Chevy or Dodge=Medium mileage
Really depends on how well the vehicle has been taken care of.
2007-05-25 14:58:08
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answer #8
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answered by Brent W 2
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0 would be a great place to start but they are hard to find. up to about ten miles is good too.
2007-05-25 15:35:03
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answer #9
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answered by oscar m 2
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10,000 miles per year is average. Anything less than that is desirable.
-MM
2007-05-25 14:52:06
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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