This is primarily a financial discussion: was it a good idea to get a seven year loan on a seven year old used car that’s replacing a used car? No. It was not.
However, Grampi is muddying the waters with this topic: parental financial help.
To be very open about it…. Yes. We help our kids financially. There are six of them. We try and keep it fair across the whole gang, but fair doesn’t mean exactly the same cash or equivalent.
Our kids range in age from 33 (married, with 3 kids of their own) to 21 (senior in college). Their places in life, and so, needs, are different.
We help because we choose to, not because it’s a financial imperative or because they’re entitled. They have all, each and every one, balked at financial help* when it’s been offered.
The real help, however, is in helping them with “adulting” - handling the admin of buying houses, or cars, or getting a bank account, or credit card, or loan. Helping them understand the framework; financial, legal, personal, in which those decisions take place and helping (not directing, but guiding) them towards good decisions.
That is real parental help.
*We covered college, and each of them has (or soon will have) graduated college with zero debt. That’s real financial help.
This thread covers car purchasing, financial decisions, and parental help.
To separate them out:
1. Help is OK
2. Seven year loan on a used car is not.
3. Trading a car with one set of issues for a car with the potential for similar issues is questionable.
Burdening them with seven years of payments to accomplish 3 (above) is where the majority of respondents are having a problem.