Sponsored

How upside down is everyone and how do you feel about it?

How upside-down are you with your Lightning loan?

  • $0 - 4,999

  • $5,000 - 9,999

  • $10,000 - 14,999

  • $15,000 - 19,999

  • $20,000 - 24,999

  • $25,000 +


Results are only viewable after voting.

Hank42

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 19, 2023
Threads
5
Messages
108
Reaction score
110
Location
NY
Vehicles
2022 Lariat ER
I'm pretty upside down, but I don't care. At the time of purchase I had a specific need that I filled by purchasing my Lightning, and the price at that time was in line with the value of said need.

So, I'm not upset at all - I got the value I paid for it and it was worth every penny. In some ways, I think such a fantastic truck(even with some of it's software issues) is undervalued at the current(low) price point.
Sponsored

 

PreservedSwine

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 5, 2023
Threads
26
Messages
319
Reaction score
382
Location
Fort Myers
Vehicles
2023 Lightning
What about us idiots that paid cash?

Itā€™s funny. We learn from our mistakes. I always thought when I was younger, that with years would come wisdom. The problem I keep running toā€¦thereā€™s always new mistakes to makešŸ˜‚
 
Last edited:

TaxmanHog

Moderator
Moderator
First Name
Noel
Joined
Jan 19, 2022
Threads
174
Messages
12,660
Reaction score
13,378
Location
SE. Mass.
Vehicles
2022 Lightning Lariat-ER & 2024 HD Road Glide CVO-ST
Occupation
Retired
removed poll expiration date to allow slackers to vote.....................
 

Lomilar

Member
First Name
Fritz
Joined
May 18, 2024
Threads
0
Messages
18
Reaction score
16
Location
Camas, WA
Vehicles
2024 F150 Lightning Flash
I think something worth considering here (not trying to contradict the OP) is that the length of your loan really determines your chances of going upside down. A 72 month loan is slower than depreciation on, I'd say, most if not all vehicles. 36 month loan has a much better chance (even with EVs that depreciate their tax credit immediately and generally suck at holding value) of staying ahead of depreciation.

To nobody's surprise, it's complicated. Hurts to see the % that are 25k upside down. I'm a "no-loan" kinda person, so I saved and saved and saved for mine that I have on order, but then they gave me 2% interest arbitrage (2.9% interest loan, I can make 5% in a savings account) so.... I'm going to do that.
 

Pioneer74

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 16, 2021
Threads
32
Messages
3,558
Reaction score
6,339
Location
Dearborn
Vehicles
2022 Lightning Lariat ER - 2022 Mach-E Premium
Occupation
Electrician
I'm with you - but what if you're in an accident and totaled?
I'll collect my insurance and buy another one.

I put some money down on it. If I'm underwater when it happens, I'll make the difference up. I have enough saved to pay the truck off, and I just might. But I have a few things I want to do first.
 

Sponsored

F150ROD

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 14, 2021
Threads
120
Messages
3,524
Reaction score
4,321
Location
SoCal
Vehicles
F150 IB Lariat Lightning/Miata ND2 Club
Occupation
U.S. Navy Retired
Upside by probably $30k, who knows never checked. I did put close to $20K down when all was said and done. The popularity of the EV Truck or just EV in general here in California isn't that great. Not to mention with 42,000 miles it's expected. Of course Ive never actually had it appraised, it's all KBB and what not.

I don't plan on getting rid of it, but it feels as though software updates have only made it worse as oppose to being improved. In the early days there was 1 or 2 updates that improved the truck but recently the dealer installed update made it worse, didn't help that I volunteered to be the guinea pig in order to fix my Blue Cruise.
 

Newton

Well-known member
Joined
May 27, 2021
Threads
11
Messages
394
Reaction score
542
Location
WA State
Vehicles
VW e-Golf, 2023 Lightning Lariat SR, Kia EV6, Toyota T-100
This is a serious question so don't take it as snark. What did you expect when you bought the truck? Was the idea that, like sometimes happens with houses, you would keep it two years, put 10,000 miles on it and sell it for more than you paid for it? Maybe worst case you break even? Cars are not investments. Houses and land are investments, but people can lose money on them - I have lived through several cycles where houses and land went into foreclosure.

For example, I am sitting on a couch that probably cost us over $1,000 new. It is in pretty good shape and is a good brand. I could not sell it for that much, in fact I would most likely have to take it to the dump if I wanted to get rid of it. I have taken good, expensive small wood furniture to charities and had to beg them to take it. I have a 1980s era T-100 truck that runs great and has no rust, the KBB value of it is under $2,000. Ditto for our mint condition, < 30K miles garage kept Lexus ES-300. I lost much more than expected when I traded in my 2021 Lariat on the Lightning.

It is just the cost of buying new, I'm afraid. The good news if any, is that if you get a good payout that reflects the fair value of the truck, you should be able to buy a similar truck for that price. The Lightning is not that rare, we lost a diesel Mercedes R with very low miles for its age, and (the other guy's) insurance hardly paid us anything for it despite the fact that you really couldn't find any car like that anywhere in the country. They were seriously proposing cars with 150K miles in Florida (I live in WA) as comparables.
 
Last edited:

Newton

Well-known member
Joined
May 27, 2021
Threads
11
Messages
394
Reaction score
542
Location
WA State
Vehicles
VW e-Golf, 2023 Lightning Lariat SR, Kia EV6, Toyota T-100
If you want to save money, always buy used - however there are benefits to buying new that don't show up if you just compare the cost of a new truck to a used one. The most important financial one is the warranty - even if a two year old car had hardly any miles and had been kept in a museum-quality garage it would still be worth less than the equivalent new car. Warranty matters, when we were looking for E-Trons the 2019s were at a pretty high price. Suddenly in 2023 they dropped like a rock, because Audi's warranty had expired.

The intangible benefit is that you bought a new car - and now you know the history of it. You know it hasn't been somoked in, damaged by a dog, charged incorrectly, or has some serious hidden mechanical flaw from an accident. KBB knows none of that when you put that information into their website, nor does any prospective buyer. That is part of the 'extra' that you paid.

The final consideration is mileage. I have seen people complaining about how much their car dropped in value over only two years, and it turns out that they put 'only' 50,000 miles on it. Every mile put on not only affects how much a buyer might want to pay, but also shortens the warranty.
 

shutterbug

Well-known member
First Name
Joseph
Joined
May 20, 2021
Threads
7
Messages
1,245
Reaction score
1,222
Location
Phoenix
Vehicles
MME GB FEā€”Dead. F150L Lariat SR. MME Rally.
This is a serious question so don't take it as snark. What did you expect when you bought the truck? Was the idea that, like sometimes happens with houses, you would keep it two years, put 10,000 miles on it and sell it for more than you paid for it? Maybe worst case you break even? Cars are not investments. Houses and land are investments, but people can lose money on them - I have lived through several cycles where houses and land went into foreclosure.
I don't think OP was hoping to make money on the truck. His worry was more along the lines of getting into an accident and insurance company totaling it. Then, if he is severely under water, he has to cover that plus down payment on a new vehicle.
 

Sponsored

ericpullen

Well-known member
First Name
Eric
Joined
Jan 4, 2022
Threads
29
Messages
223
Reaction score
427
Location
Louisville, KY
Vehicles
22 F-150 Lightning & 22 Mach-E
Speaking of this, I keep watching the dealership I bought my truck from discounting the red 2022 Platinum that can in the same day. Itā€™s down to $75k on the website, wonder how much lower it will go. Still owe way less than that, but I use it as a good mental note for the market. šŸ˜€
 

flyct

Well-known member
First Name
Jerry
Joined
Sep 28, 2023
Threads
16
Messages
372
Reaction score
506
Location
South Florida
Vehicles
'24 F-450 Platinum & '23 Ford Lightning Lariat & 2 Tesla Model Ys
Occupation
Blissfully Retired
Make a plan to become debt free. Once you ge there the weight of debt off your shoulders is awesome and easily maintained. .
 

Newton

Well-known member
Joined
May 27, 2021
Threads
11
Messages
394
Reaction score
542
Location
WA State
Vehicles
VW e-Golf, 2023 Lightning Lariat SR, Kia EV6, Toyota T-100
I don't think OP was hoping to make money on the truck. His worry was more along the lines of getting into an accident and insurance company totaling it. Then, if he is severely under water, he has to cover that plus down payment on a new vehicle.
If insurance is efficient (a bigā€ifā€) he should get a check for the amount necessary to buy a truck in the same condition, not a new vehicle. I would think the lien holder would transfer the loan rather than have him walk. What would they do otherwise, repossess the wreck? He could always walk and view the down payment and monthly so far as rental.
 

shutterbug

Well-known member
First Name
Joseph
Joined
May 20, 2021
Threads
7
Messages
1,245
Reaction score
1,222
Location
Phoenix
Vehicles
MME GB FEā€”Dead. F150L Lariat SR. MME Rally.
If insurance is efficient (a bigā€ifā€) he should get a check for the amount necessary to buy a truck in the same condition, not a new vehicle. I would think the lien holder would transfer the loan rather than have him walk. What would they do otherwise, repossess the wreck? He could always walk and view the down payment and monthly so far as rental.
The insurance company will only pay for the difference between value and the amount of the loan.
Sponsored

 
 





Top