i'd not do that.
I'd take them up on the offer of the loan, pay off the car early (he's already got a settlement figure of £9300) and then sell the car. Pay that family member back.
i'd not do that.
I'd take them up on the offer of the loan, pay off the car early (he's already got a settlement figure of £9300) and then sell the car. Pay that family member back.
He'd have to owe the family member the difference and step up to the plate and take some responsibility and make cut backs to start saving to pay it back.
I've been there before. Start going through the house and see what you can sell that you don't need. Get it up for sale on ebay etc.... sell DVDs at computer exchange etc..
Amazing what you think you "need" but in fact don't when you're short of money.
I decided it would be best to get myself a car. IT costs me £10,000 on finance. I pay £225 a month and bought the car in september 2010. My settlement figure is £9300. I don't use the car often enough so i have decided i want to pay it off using a loan and sell it privately and get a run around.
[TW]Fox;18269357 said:Not many people on £15k a year are going to have a pension contribution so huge that it knocks take home down to 900 quid. Besides, does this guy really strike you as the sort to have a high contribution pension on the go?
He just isnt paid very well, yet thinks he should have all the lifestyle accessories of a higher salary.
depends if the finance is secured on the car or not.
that says to me its secured as he bought the car "on finance" rather than got a bank loan.
depends if the finance is secured on the car or not.
that says to me its secured as he bought the car "on finance" rather than got a bank loan.
[TW]Fox;18269357 said:He just isnt paid very well, yet thinks he should have all the lifestyle accessories of a higher salary.
It's difficult to say to be honest. What makes me think it wasn't HP is that he didn't mention anything about surrendering it, while he did about his Mrs car.
But I think we've covered his best options?
Unsecured
A) Sell 10K car. Pay HSBC loan. Buy runaround.
Secured
1) Do nothing
2) Speak to finance comany, see how much the diff between selling price and settlement is, add that to cost of runaround and borrow that from family.
3) Use family members 10K to pay off the finance on the car. Sell the car. Buy a runaround. Pay remainder to family member, repay rest to family member over time - really the same as option 2.
I can't think of any other way around it...
[FnG]magnolia;18269847 said:None of this debate matters. The OP will ignore all advice offered and will instead do what keeps him in his (unsustainable) comfort zone.

Have not read through all posts but the OP topic is disgusting.
The banks/loan companies should not be allowing this. Many people will say it's the persons thought for taking the loan in the first place but there are a lot of thick/naive people out there that are getting taken advantage of.
It's must be like waving money in someone's face with how easy it is to get debt.
I'm just thankful I was brought up where my family taught me to respect money from an early age.
If you don't have the money then save is the best advice you can get.
if people don't have the money then they take a loan, that's what loans are for