I got my car (2020 Ford Fusion Hybrid SE) new 3 years ago at $25k for a 6 year loan @ 0% interest for entirety of loan, $350 a month payment. I’m about halfway paid off and have about $12.5k left on it. What should I do? I just get sick of paying $350 a month.

  • balance_sheet@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    Technically, if you just pay off 0% interest loan just because you can, you’re losing money(interest).

    It is not only needless but is also an actually worse financial decision.

  • BrerChicken @lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    Most people are skipping the important point here, though I did see it at least once: the money you pay now is worth more than the money you’ll pay next year, or the year after that. That’s true not only because of inflation, but also because of your own earning power. Are you making the same amount of money today that you were making 3 years ago? Probably not–I’d guess that you’re making a little more. That means that each dollar you spend was a little easier to get, and is thus is worth a little less. The 12.5 K that you would pay now is probably worth more to you than it would be if it was spread out. So spread it out. The more dollars you pay later, the less those dollars are worth. This is a no brainer on a no interest loan, but it can still be true even if you’re paying interest, though the calculation gets a little complicated. If you have a relatively low interest loan, it might make more sense for you to keep making payments than to try to squeeze it in all at the beginning, especially if it’s a house mortgage (which are usually long-term). Those monthly payments, in 20 years, will be worth a lot less than they are now. It might seem crazy, but it doesn’t always make sense to maximize payments at the beginning of a loan just to reduce interest because 2023 dollars are not the same as 2043 dollars.

  • ChihuahuaOfDoom@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    I’d bite the bullet and keep paying it, it looks good on your credit report to have secured credit with a long repayment history.

      • Chainweasel@lemmy.world
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        2 years ago

        Paying off early and closing the account will drop that for a little while though. I just paid off a personal loan 4 months early and mine dropped by 21 points.

        • cassetti@kbin.social
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          2 years ago

          How are you checking your credit score? Frequent hard-pulls of your actual credit score would show up on your credit report and actually lower your credit score on it’s own.

          I’ll bet you’re using a service like credit karma which pinky-promises it is properly calculating your credit score. But is it really?

          Nah their scoring model weighs different things differently. And over the past decade, I get a sense that they put more value on your open lines of credit themselves over closed credit in order to encourage people to open more credit cards (which is good business for banks, but not the customer).

          https://www.cnbc.com/select/credit-karma-vs-fico-credit-scores/

          Don’t put too much faith in those services to give you an accurate credit score, and personally I wouldn’t allow them access to my personal information - that’s just another avenue of attack by a hacker if they compromise the CreditKarma mainframes and steal your info.

          • Chainweasel@lemmy.world
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            2 years ago

            Your credit score isn’t about how good you are at repaying your debts, it’s about how reliable you are at generating and paying interest to your creditors. They don’t care if you pay it off, so long as you keep making monthly payments. That’s why you’ll get refinancing offers when you’re close to paying off a loan, they want to keep those interest payments coming. Even if you’re not paying interest now, they still want to see that repayment history.

            • cassetti@kbin.social
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              2 years ago

              Many people seem to forget credit scores didn’t exist before 1989. Decades ago a wife would have to get permission from the husband to open a line of credit with a department store.

              Credit scores were built to help the banks, not the average person.

              • ryathal@sh.itjust.works
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                2 years ago

                Not only that, but getting a mortgage before credit scores sucked. It’s never been easier to get money other than the ninja loans in the 2008 mortgage crash. Loans were only a thing for white people with bosses that liked them, or high status jobs like doctors and lawyers.

  • Delphia@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    If you dont want to take risks investing it chuck the savings in an account and have the loan payments taken from that account. If nothing else it keeps your funds liquid incase you need emergency cash.

  • Bazzatron@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    If it’s always $350 a month, just let the debt ride.

    Over 6 years, $350 in year 1 is worth more than $350 in year 6 thanks to inflation (350$ in 2017 would be able to buy you $435 worth of goods or services today). If you have $12.5k sitting around - Invest that into something stable, collect the interest and just keep paying off the loan slowly because that’s the cheapest way to do it (unless we end up with negative inflation in the next 3 years - which seems unlikely, but who knows??)

    Cars tend to be financial liabilities, depreciation on a new car is just tremendous - next time just get a beater with working AC for as little as possible, do your maintenance and run it into the ground.

  • reflex@kbin.social
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    2 years ago

    If you don’t pay it back though, won’t your car get repoed? I feel like I’m missing something with the responses here.

    Edit: thanks chums, @Num10ck, @bstix. Thank God this is nostupidquestions because I knew I was missing something basic.
    I interpreted the title to mean, “continuing to pay off the remainder as usual,” as opposed to in a lump sum.

  • Andy@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    Is it absolutely 0% or is it 0% with a $10/month administration fee? If the former, don’t pay it off early, just set up a standing order/direct debit and let it pay itself down. If the latter, you need to calculate the comparison rate (which will get higher the closer you get to zero balance), and work out what the break even is. Then carry on paying until you hit the point that the effective interest is greater than the interest on your savings account and at that point pay it off in full.

  • teamevil@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    I mean think about how much money that 12.5k could generate for you, especially since you’re not paying to use the car manufacturers money. The interest rate is the cost to borrow the money… you’re getting it for free. Put the money…we’ll ask a fiduciary they have to give you good advice not based on a commission or profit.

  • andrewta@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    If you need to take out another loan for something else then pay it off. So you have less debt on the books. Otherwise just keep the loan. It’s zero interest

  • Skyleb@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    Another consideration is that most auto loans require you to have full coverage for your vehicle. If you pay it off early you can reduce coverage if that’s right for you.

  • JubBurnsRed53@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    I see, and I hope I’m not coming off as patronizing or anything; however, what happens at the end of the 6 years if you fail to pay everything back? From my understanding of 0% interest loans (which I’m not a particularly financially savy person), if it’s not paid back by the end of that time (6 years in this case) you’ll most likely receive huge penalties. Not only to your credit score, but also to your wallet since you’ll probably be required to pay back much more at that point. Maybe you don’t make regular monthly payments, and there are no immediate penalties, but at the end of those 6 years you’ll still owe what’s left. I’d rather make a bunch of $350 payments than one $12.5k payment. Unless you could afford that, I just don’t think most people can ¯⁠\⁠_⁠(⁠ツ⁠)⁠_⁠/⁠¯

    I just think staying in your current payment plan would be best. No matter what, you’d have saved at least $350 for your car each month, you might as well just pay it as it goes. Don’t pay it of too early it anything, but do what you can to reach that end goal. I could be wrong, but I doubt a car dealership would give out an untimed, pay whenever you want loan to somebody. Most dealers are out to make money and giving somebody a loan like that wouldn’t do them any favors. Even if you have good credit.

          • NoISaidSteamedHams@lemmy.world
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            2 years ago

            With 0% interest there’s no incentive to pay it off any sooner but that also means that if you aren’t paying sooner you aren’t getting any penalty.

            Instead, you can literally do anything else you want with the extra money you might have otherwise spent on paying off the loan early. You can invest it or just stick it in a savings account since those are pretty high-yield right now.

            In today’s high-interest financing environment, having a low interest loan around is practically an asset; take full advantage of it because it’s going to be a minute before we see cars again being sold at 0% interest (unless car companies get super desperate)

  • NutWrench@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    Does that $350 include car insurance? Once you pay off the lien and own the car, insurance should be a lot cheaper.