It's very interesting reading through these responses.
There was one that stuck out, someone mentioned that buying that new car was how they entered into the housing market. That worked for you, and that's great, but it is so wildly beyond the truth it's crazy. I wonder how vehicle prices, crappy finance deals, etc. would change if people realized that a car loan is yes a way to build credit history, but not the only way. My wife and I were driving mid 90's cars when we bought our house 5 years ago in a HCOL area, spending way more than we expected for our first home, excellent credit from using CC's and paying off every month.
To the point that I've seen a few times, around people saying "if you value your time", what's that about? I value my time, yes, and part of that time is doing something I am good at, which is diagnosing and wrenching on cars. There is great satisfaction in taking vehicle that is neglected and bringing it back to life, or making it your own. That is an okay thing to be spending your time on. For some, it may feel below them, and those are probably the people I don't want to hang out with at parties. To me, it is in some part therapy. It's ritualistic to go over the daily drivers and make sure they are in good condition and they will get my family home when needed. Trusting that some underpaid and overworked mechanic is going to do the same is ridiculous. If you think that bringing your FRS into Toyota means that a mechanic who cherishes or values that car beyond anything but another repair order, well... Then again, if they leave the drain plug out, Toyota would need to replace the mill, I guess how much is your time worth when waiting in the customer lounge?
Besides, to some of the points above, this is GRM, not Rennlist, the argument that somehow a brand new car is absolutely without any faults, and cannot fail doesn't work here, and that a used car is somehow a ticking time bomb of cascading failures, is ridiculous.
I think new cars work for some people, but the costs are staggering. If you are in a financial position to purchase brand new without any loans, then we probably aren't talking the same language. But if entering a loan agreement, you get a few years down the road, and don't love the car, how do you recover? You've taken a huge hit in depreciation, you are still financially liable for the remainder of the loan for a car that doesn't really resonate with you.
I'd actually be very interested to hear what someone who has purchased a brand new, enthusiast car, is shelling out for their monthly financial liability. 400? 500? 600? There was at least one person who did the math and worked out that buying new was cheaper than buying used, I would legitmiately love to see that, but I have never been able to make the math work!
Everybody needs to do what works for them, but the thought of spending money on a depreciating asset and chalking the net negative cost to "well it's more reliable and I don't need to think about it" is wild to me. I spend more time thinking about what fun car I get to drive next or what new mountain bike widget or dirt bike widget or whatever widget I'm going to pursue next than worrying that my daily driver is going to catastrophically fail. And if something were to catastrophically fail in life (someone get's hurt, we lose our jobs, etc.), it's one less financial liability to think about.