Question:

I need a car now.... but?

by  |  earlier

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i have no credit and no co signer.... i was looking at used vw jettas at 6000 dollars, but i only have 2000 in the bank. I was wondering what do you think my options are in terms of financing? i mean im willing to put down 1/3 of the car now but do you think i will get approved or do you think i will need a co-signer?

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7 ANSWERS


  1. no credit , no-cosigner surely you want a loan for a car and dear you can get a loan easily, there are many online sources who are providing this type of loans so try to contact them and you can get your problem resolved, for your reference try http://www.carloans-forall.com my one of friend has just get a car loan with no-cosigner and with low interest rates you can try them.


  2. credityes.com!!!!!!

  3. Get a cheaper car that run good.

    There are plenty out there.  Don't dig yourself a bigger hole - even if you can get a loan.

    ===

    I have a 94 Civic that runs like new (high mileage but in good running condition & reliable).  If I had to sell it, it would not get much.  That's the kind of car you want to get.

    Good Luck...

  4. Ok get real.  You got $2,000.  You want transportation.  You can get a pretty good car for Under $1,000.  I did.  Pay Cash!  Buy a Hooptie!  I got one 7 yrs ago for $800.  Drove it 3 years then my landlord's tree fell on it.  His insurance replaced it with a year older, better runing car of the same model.  I've done some major mechanical work to it.  It IS after all a 30 year old car.  Thank the fates it's NOT a VW!  In 80,000 mi over the two "Hooptie" cars my initial cost and repairs  have equaled less than $2,000.  I have replaced a clutch, a head gasket, and the radiator in the current "Hooptie"  It's a '78 Toyota Celica GT Hatchback.  Ya, that's right, it's 30 years old.  I dare to say it will perform better than most any $6,000 used car.  I'm totally certain it will blow the doors off the $6,000 Jetta.  It's nearly totally reliable.  Parts are expensive but not totally out of line.  It gets 27.5 Mpg at 80mph, on regular gas.   It's got some useless accessories but handles like a true sportscar.  I go WAY past the redline on the tach constantly on my commute to work and back.  I Never was a fan of little "Peanut" cars but I chose this make and model because of it's reliability and it's indestructable reputation.  The puny 4 cyl 20 R toyota motor makes a wimpy 96 horsepower.  Yes that right,  2,300 cc, 5 speed transmission, rear wheel drive.  Little b*****d weighs well over a ton and sits on 900 series 14" tires.  It'll spin them tires in the first 3 gears.  You could choose a better car than a Jetta.  Even one as old as mine.  You need to concentrate on finding a reliable, adequately performing car that YOU CAN BUY WITH CASH .  There are many out there.  Silly in my opinion to go in debt for a used car.

  5. Save more money; Get a credit card, Pay it off; Get financing.

  6. First, I agree with the guy that bought the Honda Civic, but a car you can pay for OUTRIGHT, your best bet is a late 90's Civic/Corolla... Second, I had a VW Jetta, and I had a TON of PROBLEMS with it... Anything you buy from a dealer within the 6000 range to them, you can pick-up on the street for 3500-4k. s***w Financing, you'll be paying for it EVEN when you have to fix it. Look for a late 90's Honda/Toyota...

  7. awwww Im in the same boat

    I wish you all the best of luck !!!!'

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