More Than 80 Percent Of Americans Can’t Afford New Cars

More Than 80 Percent Of Americans Can’t Afford New Cars

Thanks to rising interest rates, dealer markups, and a messed up supply chain, the cost of buying a car is through the roof. But have you ever considered what you might need to earn before signing up for a mammoth loan to finance a new car? Well, according to a new report, it’s actually more than the majority of Americans make right now.

2024 Chevrolet Colorado ZR2 Bison | First Drive

I Need A Fun And Fuel Efficient Ride | What Car Should You Buy?

Thursday 2:43PM

According to a report from Market Watch, you shouldn’t be spending more than ten percent of your annual income on each monthly car payment. But with the average cost of a car rising seemingly every month, what does that actually mean for anyone in the market for a new motor?

Well, according to the site, buying something average like a Toyota Crown Limited or a two-door Wrangler Rubicon (which both retail around the $48k mark) would require you to earn more than $96,000 for you to be able to comfortably afford the monthly payments. Market Watch breaks it down like this:

[Greg] McBride, the Bankrate analyst, walked MarketWatch through a hypothetical car-buying scenario for an average-priced new car that cost $48,000. Taking into account the trade-in value of your existing vehicle, let’s say you knock some money off the sticker price and finance a $40,000 purchase price at 7.5% for five years. That’s an $801 monthly payment — which means you would need to make $96,100 a year if you wanted that payment to be 10% of your income.

In fact, the company goes so far as to quote a Ford exec who said, “You have to make over $100,000 just to afford a new car” earlier this year.

See also  The Rigsby Sisters Whistleblower Case Against State Farm Comes to an End After 16 Years

So just who is buying new cars in America at a rate that means sales across the States keep rising? Well, if we base it just on the number of people who can mathematically afford a new car, it’s not that many people.

According to the latest earnings statistics, just 18 percent of individuals in America actually earn $100,000 or more, which means there’s 82 percent of people below this line right now. In contrast, the average salary in the U.S. is $59,428, which means that most of us should be spending much less than $600 per month on our cars.

Things get a little better when you look at combined household incomes, with 34.4% of U.S. households making more than $100k each year. But as the average new car payments currently sit around the $750 dollar mark, there are clearly still a lot of people paying more than they can afford in order to stay out on the road.