P3PPY said:
I told her it's hard to jump on a $2-3k deal when it's 4 hours away, especially when I need to look out for "undisclosed factors". She suggested instead spending $1k each year on a local car, which the idea of it thrills me but I need to think it thru. In KC with much less rust that was a dream of mine. In fact, $500 cars were my daily drivers.
But the market has changed too ala-covid.
I am a firm believer that $5k has become the new $3k. That is to say that $3k used to buy you a good-enough DD. That is hard to do now for less than $5k. Those are retail prices. GRM wisdom can reduce those prices some but will require effort or knowledge.
Sure, I just recently bought a $500 Prius but it needed what amounts to $300 worth of tires and $200 worth of 12v battery. Sure, I was lucky enough to have these parts from another Prius but that $500 became $500 more or $1k net. That was for a car with 225k miles.
In retrospect, pre-covid, for $800 I bought this Ford Focus w/ 128k miles for just $800 and it needed nothing more.
My point being that even at the lowest end of the market there are still deals but those deals cost more now (for less car) than they did before.
Pre-covid I bought my perfectly running ole Montero and had it running on the road for less than $2k. Four years later and 17k miles later, I sold it with a minor trans issue, worse tires, worse suspension, and worse body for slightly more than what I paid for it.
Hang in there, but, you might need to up your budget.
Heading into snowy weather makes Subarus premium priced in your area. But, even with that issue, act now because Feb and tax return pricing will only drive this crazy market even higher.
I think what you do find will need some wrenching. That southern-ish Subaru with a problem that could be fixed with wrenches may have been a better value than the rust that you will find up north that can't be fixed with wrenches.