CPO 2018 GT vs 2022 Preferred
I'm getting very close to joining the CX-5 family. My decision is coming down to a Certified 2018 Grand Touring (found a VIN without the fuel pump recall!) 28k miles, and the 2022 Preferred. My biggest hesitation is a 2022 going to push me to the limit of my budget - about $70 more a month for a 60 month loan. They look pretty close to me except for the bigger infotainment screen. If I push the loan to 72 months, it's closer, only about a $10 difference, longer loan though.
Is the 2022 any better of a driving experience?
thanks in advance!
Is the 2022 any better of a driving experience?
thanks in advance!
AFAIK, the seats are different and you might like the 2022 seats more. The narrow hard seats are my only complaint in our 2018 GT and hence, I would suggest that you take both the 2018 and the 2022 for a long test drive to understand if you are OK with the seats.
I've bought far more vehicles in my life than I should have and some of them also pushed me to or beyond my budget. I regretted those decisions and dealt with immense stress for years. I'd say to go with the 2018 and be happy with an excellent CPO vehicle. Don't lock yourself into a stressful 5-6 years--you never know what might come up where money would be better to have than a slightly newer vehicle.
I've bought far more vehicles in my life than I should have and some of them also pushed me to or beyond my budget. I regretted those decisions and dealt with immense stress for years. I'd say to go with the 2018 and be happy with an excellent CPO vehicle. Don't lock yourself into a stressful 5-6 years--you never know what might come up where money would be better to have than a slightly newer vehicle.
I definitely understand that. We recently bought our son a new 2022 CX-5 instead of a used vehicle because the used ones (slightly higher trims) cost more. However, the OP indicated that the new one is $70/month over budget and extending a loan out 6 years (and still over budget) isn't a great idea. If I could go back any tell myself anything, it would be not to stretch the budget so much, especially with vehicles. The stress was unbearable for years.
I definitely understand that. We recently bought our son a new 2022 CX-5 instead of a used vehicle because the used ones (slightly higher trims) cost more. However, the OP indicated that the new one is $70/month over budget and extending a loan out 6 years (and still over budget) isn't a great idea. If I could go back any tell myself anything, it would be not to stretch the budget so much, especially with vehicles. The stress was unbearable for years.
I definitely understand that. We recently bought our son a new 2022 CX-5 instead of a used vehicle because the used ones (slightly higher trims) cost more. However, the OP indicated that the new one is $70/month over budget and extending a loan out 6 years (and still over budget) isn't a great idea. If I could go back any tell myself anything, it would be not to stretch the budget so much, especially with vehicles. The stress was unbearable for years.
Correct--I ran into problems a bit over a decade ago. I learned my lesson, started saving massive amounts of my income, and paid for my CX-5 in cash earlier this month and have more than enough cash/investments to cover my other vehicles, etc.. Because of the economy though, I elected for some car payments in case things get too rocky.
Correct--I ran into problems a bit over a decade ago. I learned my lesson, started saving massive amounts of my income, and paid for my CX-5 in cash earlier this month and have more than enough cash/investments to cover my other vehicles, etc.. Because of the economy though, I elected for some car payments in case things get too rocky.
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