- Joined
- 23 Jul 2012
- Posts
- 863
- Location
- Mirfield, West Yorkshire,
I'd rather have the insignia turbo then
If you don't mind me asking, what will you be spending in total for car and finance?
£11K with a 20% Deposit of around £2k
I'd rather have the insignia turbo then
If you don't mind me asking, what will you be spending in total for car and finance?
This is for insurance purposesToo common and its expensive to insure, too uncommon and you get high quotes as the car does not have a history with teenagers
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Have you thought about a Juke Dig-T? My insurance was laughably cheap at 21 with that.
Edit; MPG not in your bracket.
Edit 2; INB4 "Nissan Joke" Juke joke.
Apologies if this has already been mentioned - but does the car have to be brand new?
I dont think it is judging by what he said he is paying. I doubt you can get a brand new Polo 1.2TSI for £13k Including finance when the list is 15.5 or something.
My 19 year old son passed his test a year ago.
He wanted to buy a 10k car, I said buy something cheap as you will probably/will have a scrape here or there, typical teenager wouldn't have any of it, so we gave him my wife's old 206, since then he has hit a post in tesco's car park denting the bonnet and bumper and somehow managed to run the whole side of the car up against a wall in another car park whilst arguing with his GF.
He thanks me now for not buying an expensive car.
OP get something cheap.
Something cheap will cost 2x on insurance. Insurance is dead money, as you dont get anything back at the end of the cars life.
He got insured on the 206 for ~£2100. On a 10k car he was getting quotes of £3500+.
My point was he is glad that get damaged a cheap car instead of a 10k one mate.
Something cheap will cost 2x on insurance. Insurance is dead money, as you dont get anything back at the end of the cars life.
Name of the game at this stage is building NCB; if you're driving something cheap and have a minor prang then you can bodge it and not bother with a claim. If you're in something expensive then you'll need to get it repaired properly to maintain value, hence somewhat negating the difference in insurance costs.
Something like 40% of 17-year-old males have an accident in their first six months, so its a fairly big gamble.
Also, The Polo I want, £2000 insurance, 2005 Polo of similar but slower spec, £4500 insurance, a £500 shed thats available to all teenagers budget to buy, uninsurable.
And what percentage of that 40% will involve the 17 year old male only damaging his own car and no other property?
Well what else do you suggest that will fit my needs?
- Reliable
- Comfort (for a small car anyway)
- Has a bit of poke to it
- Spacious
- Not french
- Good build quality (With new Polo's, the 3dr are made in Germany, 5dr Brazil)
- Uncommon for first drivers, but not too uncommon (1.2TSI is an unusual engine for a 18yr old as they are rare, but not a really powerful engine either)
- Good MPG (Polo Quotes average of 53.3)
- Preferably petrol, though I was looking at diesel Corsa D's before
- 3dr
Also, look at crash statistics rather than insurance group. I could get insured on a group 13 (Old scoring) Vaexhall Insignia Turbo 180Bhp for less than a group 3 Citroen C2 1.1.
Many young people drive around in £500 car without dying in a ball of flames or breaking down in the Outback.