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Cars for Smart People – How to Find the Best Car

Buying a car can be really stressful, what are some good cars for smart people? Using the 6 tips we came up with in part 1, we will show you how to find the best car. Remember the tips are:

  1. Never buy a new car
  2. Don’t buy cars expecting to sell them later
  3. Buy a car based on reliability
  4. Never buy the remodel year
  5. Take your time when buying a car
  6. Do your research when buying a car

According to the manufacturer quality index ratings given by dashboard-light, three of the top five car brands are owned by Toyota: Lexus, Scion, and of course Toyota. Remember in tip number one in the last post that luxury cars lose roughly half their value in the first three years, so don’t buy a luxury or expensive car. So that rules out Lexus, Hummer, Porsche, Mercedes, and Infiniti–unless you’re getting something that’s more than 15 years old. A used Lexus is basically the same as its Toyota equivalent.

Honda is number 8 on the list, and the only brand that’s not a Toyota or a luxury car. And every brand below it is rated at 50% or worse. This isn’t to say that all of the vehicles from a highly rated brand are good or all vehicles from a poorly rated brand are trash. This is just an average. For example Ford has a quality rating of 28%, but the current F-150s are very reliable – 95%.

The best car might be a Toyota
Three of the top five car brands are owned by Toyota

Step 1 Find a Car Maker

As an example of how to decide on a car to buy let’s look at Honda. Its overall quality rating is a 60% so good, but not super great. Dashboard-light then gives you ratings for individual car models. The Accord gets a 52%, the Civic gets a 71% and the CR-V gets a 78%. There are other models of course, but let’s say you’re looking for a sedan, and since 71% is better than 52%, you opt for the Civic. It’s also smaller, cheaper, and gets better fuel economy.

I use dashboard-light when finding the best car
The best car has a high reliability score

After selecting the Honda Civic, it’ll send you to a page with the last several model generations. From these pictures below you can see that in the early 90’s the Civic wasn’t very reliable, but over the last 30 years it has continued to get better. The 2012-2019 model generation has a reliability score of 94%! (I wish I could have done that well in college.) The rate of powertrain defects is currently less than 5%, well below the industry average.

Step 2 Check Model Year

Armed with this information we then head over to Consumer Reports. On the Honda Civic page they have every model from 2000 to present along with their price, reliability verdict, and owner satisfaction. In the 2006-2011 generation CR reports that 2006 and 2008 had a reliability verdict of 3/5 whereas 2007 and 2009-2011 had a reliability verdict of 4/5. The 2006 model has 15 safety recalls whereas the 2011 model only has 9. This matches up with tip number 4: Never buy a remodel year. Wait until it’s been iterated upon and improved.

The next generation is 2012-2015. Consumer Reports has a reliability verdict of 5/5 for all of these. Then there is the 2016-2020 generation 2016 has a 2/5, 2017-19 has a 3/5, and 2020 has a 5/5 reliability. This, again, is understandable given that 2016 was the remodel year. This highlights one of the issues with buying a new car. Even if the last several years are great quality that doesn’t means that the next year will be good. The 2016 Civic is an illustration of this.

So in conclusion, after we followed all the steps, we’ve narrowed our search down to the 2012-2015 Honda Civic. All 4 of these years have a 5/5 reliability verdict and less than 3 safety recalls. Usually I recommend staying away from the remodel year, but the 2012 Civic seems great if you want it a little cheaper. The next step is to search through Honda-dedicated forums or maintenance issue forums to get a fuller picture of what you’re buying.

Using these steps, here are a few other cars I’ve found that are good.

  • Toyota Corolla – Pretty much any year except the 2019 model. Also don’t get the hatchback. Hatchbacks are great, but the Corolla hatchback is still too new.
  • Toyota Camry – Pretty much any year. Starting in 2018 they switched from a 6-speed automatic to an 8-speed and there were some issues with that, so you might want to stick to a pre-2018 model.
  • Toyota Yaris 2007-2020 except 2009 ($5,050 – $18,175) – The Yaris was discontinued after 2020 because Toyota sold more Corollas in a month than they did Yaris’s in a year, but they’ll keep making parts for decades to come and now that it’s discontinued, used ones will be cheaper.
  • Toyota Sienna 2010-2016 ($6,975 – $17,700) – Even with Toyota’s superior quality, they haven’t made a great minivan since 2016.
  • Honda Odyssey 2016 ($17,650) – For being the go-to minivan for families, most model years are actually quite unreliable. You’re probably better off with a Toyota Sienna.
  • Honda Civic 2012-2015 ($7,675 – $13,350)
  • Honda Fit 2009-2013 ($6,450 – $9,375). 2017-2019 ($14,900 – $16,875)
  • Honda Accord 2009-2017 ($7,275 – $18,450)
  • Mazda 3 2012-2018 $7,725 – $16,225)
  • Mazda 6 2014-2019 ($10,400 – $22,475)
  • Nissan Leaf 2013-2017, 2019 ($5,325 – $9,600, $18,725) – The Leaf is a special case because it is electric. Dashboard-light http://www.dashboard-light.com/vehicles/Nissan_Leaf.html gives Nissan an overall quality rating of 27%, but gives the Leaf a 100% reliability rating and CR mostly gives it a 5/5. Because it is electric there are no engine or transmission issues that normal cars face. It has its own set of problems like the battery needing replacing, but as far as reliability the Leaf is in a class by itself. CR states that it is much more reliable than any other electric car. You’ll notice the drastic change in price between 2019 and 2017. Electric cars are like luxury cars in that a huge amount of depreciation happens in the first few years. This is because Li-Ion batteries are getting exponentially cheaper to produce. I’m seriously considering getting one for my next car because my commute is about 30 miles round trip and at 3.5 cents/mile the Leaf is about three times cheaper than my current car which gets ~30 miles per gallon.

These are a few good quality cars I’ve identified, but of course just taking my recommendations at face value would violate tip number 6. Do you own research folks! This is not an exhaustive list nor are you automatically an idiot for buying an unreliable or new car. Maybe you really want to get a Audi. They’re not cheap or reliable, but if you do your research, find a good year, and know what you’re getting yourself into, that’s what makes someone a smart car buyer.

What do you think? How much research did you guys put into buying your vehicles? Did it pay off? Let us know in the comments below.

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Cars for Smart People – 6 Tips for Buying a Car

According to Kelly Blue Book the average new car now costs over $40,000. KBB (kbb.com) calculated the average transaction price for a light vehicle in the U.S. to $40,857 as of January 2021. $40,000 is a jaw-dropping amount of money, even for a brand new car. To be fair this number is for transaction price, so it most-likely include taxes and title and license fees, but even still no smart person should pay $40,000 for a new car. Here are 6 tips for buying a car.

Smart people should never buy a new car

Everyone knows that cars depreciate as soon as they’re driven off the lot, but how much they depreciate depends on the car. More expensive cars depreciate the most in an absolute value sense, but they also depreciate the most as a percentage of original value. A luxury car will lose half its value in three years, but a cheaper economy car will hold its value. For example between 2018 and 2021 the BMW 3 series sedan has depreciated by about 45% whereas the Toyota Corolla has only lost about 10% of its value in that same time. Source: Consumer Reports

Smart people don’t buy cars expecting to sell them later

Smart people know that cars are not assets. Assets are things that appreciate in value over time. Cars do the opposite, making them a liability. They way to get the most value out of your car is to drive them until the wheels fall off. This literally happened to me in high school. We bought a junker, and I drove it until a wheel actually fell off. We put a new (rebuilt) engine in it then drove it for 10 more years until the transmission failed at over 200,000 miles.

The cost to own a car is an exponentially decreasing curve, meaning it costs much more to own at the beginning of its life than near the end. People often make the mistake of thinking it’s the other way around because of maintenance costs, but the cost to maintain a newer car is almost always more because newer cars are more complex. The point where this truth fails is when you finally blow the engine or transmission.

XKCD - buy a new camera instead of a car
Source xkcd.com

Smart people buy cars based on reliability

Whenever you see someone review a new car, they discuss things like how it looks, how it handles, how difficult the Bluetooth is to connect to. They’ll spend pages on how the rims or the seats look, but always fail to mention whether or not it’ll suffer engine failure in 5 years. Chryslers are nice looking cars that handle pretty well. They also happen to be one of the most unreliable brands available.

Reliability is the most important aspect of a car. No one wants their car to suddenly stop working. It’s a safety hazard, it’s annoying, and it’s expensive. When spending possibly tens of thousands of dollars on a car, why would you care about how it looks over how reliable it is? But that’s literally every car reviewer ever. I’ve never read a review that mentioned reliability. I think Consumer Reports is the only place that actually takes data on car reliability.

Smart people never buy the remodel year car

Never buy a car on the remodel year. Every few years a car company will re-design their car. This is important to keep it new and fresh. But “new and fresh” is for suckers. What smart people want is “old and reliable”. Car companies often use the phrase “Re-engineered from the ground up”. You don’t want that. Anyone who’s ever worked with engineers knows that “re-engineered from the ground up” means “we’ve made a lot of new mistakes that we aren’t yet aware of”. Instead what you want is “Iterated and improved upon for many years”. It sounds less flashy, but there’s a reason the remodel year of every car ever is the year with the most issues and recalls. A good example of this is the 2011 – 2014 generation of the Hyundai Sonata (the car I drive). The 2011 model is the remodel year and it has 14 recalls for safety problems. The 2014 model is the last year of this generation. It only has 6 safety recalls. Buy the model right before the remodel year.

Another problem with buying a new car is that you don’t know the reliability. You can follow trends and make educated guesses based on the reliability of past models, but that doesn’t always work. Just look at the Honda Odyssey minivan. It has been a staple of safety and reliability for decades. My parent’s 2002 Odyssey still runs like a champ. Then one year the Odyssey just didn’t live up to the hype. An advantage of buying a used car is that you have time to see if it is a dud or not. Even if the price were the same, I would buy a used car for exactly this reason.

“Re-engineered from the ground up” means “we’ve made a lot of new mistakes that we aren’t yet aware of”

Smart people take their time when buying a car

Cars are a need and obviously time is not a luxury that everyone has when they absolutely need to buy a car. But smart car buyers are ones who do their research before they have an immediate need. If you know your car is on its last legs spend that time researching newer cars so that when yours finally bites the dust you can immediately make the purchase.

I’d recommend against buying from a dealer, but if you do go the dealer route, smart people never buy the car the first time at the dealer. Smart people leave and go to another dealer and look at the same car. Dealerships are in the business of selling cars and they want your business. The key is to make them need you more than you need them. Let them sweat a little and then came back. You’re sure to get a better deal a day or two later.

The one thing that all of these points have in common is that smart people do their research.

Buying a car is a huge decision. $40,000 may be a foolish amount of money to spend, but even a cheap used car will set you back $10,000. Smart people don’t just flippantly make $10,000 decisions, they gather all of the data they can find and weigh it to make the best decision they can. Sites like https://www.consumerreports.org, https://www.edmunds.com/, or http://www.dashboard-light.com/ give valuable information that can make buying a car much easier.

For example dashboard-light has an index of the quality of car makers and models. We can see from this graph that Toyota has a quality rating of 83 (out of 100) and Dodge has a 36. By this scale Toyota is 2.3 times as good as Dodge yet for some reason people still buy Dodges. I’m not saying never buy something that isn’t a Toyota. Maybe you’re really into the Dodge Challenger, but never buy a car without doing your research first.

Dashboard-light is a free resource that everyone should use, but Consumer Reports costs money. Should you pay for a consumer reports subscription? CR costs $39/year. It’s bad to have subscriptions on auto-renew when you don’t use them, but it’s definitely not a bad idea to sign up for it if you are planning to buy a car in the next few months. Paying $39 in order to help you make the best decision when spending $20,000 is a very good use of your money.

Follow these tips to be a smart car buyer

  1. Never buy a new car
  2. Don’t buy cars expecting to sell them later
  3. Buy a car based on reliability
  4. Never buy the remodel year
  5. Take your time when buying a car
  6. Do your research when buying a car

In part 2 we’ll apply these tips to actual cars in order to see whether specific cars would be smart purchases. We will look at a series of different makes, models, and years, and identify some good cars and some that don’t make the cut. I may even break a few of my own rules, and show you when it might be a good idea to do so as well. All in all, we will just discuss actual cars and how to apply what we’ve learned to car shopping.

What do you think? How do you go about buying a car? Let us know in the comments below!

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Why You Shouldn’t Retire Early

I know that “you shouldn’t retire early” is a strange thing to say on a FIRE blog, but hear me out. The FIRE movement has gained a lot of traction in recent years because of the obvious allure of leaving the workforce at a young age. Quitting at 40 and never having to slave away for the Man again is an exciting thought. But people focus so much on the RE part that they forget the true meaning of FI. FIRE is more than just saving money to be able to retire early, it’s a way of living and thinking that allows you to spend money on what’s important to you rather than on things and keeping up with the Joneses. For some people this leads to retiring early, but it doesn’t have to.

Early retirement is just one way to use your savings, and I’m here to try to convince you that it’s not even the best way.

Purpose is what makes life worth living

The main tenet of FIRE is that you can use money to buy freedom. That can be seen most vividly in quitting the workforce, but early retirement in and of itself shouldn’t be the only goal. We’ve employed FIRE strategy to allow my wife, Courtney, to be a stay at home mom, or to not have to works nights or weekends.

Whatever you do find purpose in it. I work as an electrical engineer. I enjoy engineering, it’s a lot of fun, but I went into engineering because it paid well. My job is enjoyable and I like the people I work with, but I wouldn’t go to work every day if I didn’t get a paycheck. Currently the purpose of this paycheck is to support my family, but I plan to continue working after reaching FI. There are just too many charities to support. I would also like to be able to support a few missionaries full time.

Man was meant to work

One of the big issues with the FIRE movement is that mankind was meant to work. The desire to do something meaningful with our lives is a fundamental characteristic of humanity. Work doesn’t have to be grueling or even profitable to be meaningful, but working is embedded into our nature. When God created Adam, He gave him the job of tending the Garden of Eden. Genesis 2:15 says, “Then the Lord God took the man and put him into the Garden of Eden to cultivate it and keep it.” It wouldn’t have been a hard job as the world was perfect, but it was still a job, and it was still meaningful.

Work doesn’t have to be grueling or even profitable to be meaningful, but working is embedded into our nature.

Working was part of God’s original design. There is no arguing with that. It wasn’t originally designed to be exhausting work, but it was meant to be work. It wasn’t until Adam sinned that God cursed the world. In Genesis 3:17-19 God says, “Cursed is the ground because of you; in toil you will eat of it all the days of your life. Both thorns and thistles it shall grow for you… by the sweat of your face you will eat bread.”

But even now with the curse in effect, work is still part of God’s plan and still intended to be meaningful and fulfilling. Solomon, the wisest man who ever lived said, “I have seen that nothing is better than that man should be happy in his work, for that is his lot. For who will bring him to see what will occur after him?” (Ecclesiastes 3:22) Denying a basic characteristic of humanity because you don’t like your job is foolish.

Retiring can lead to death

A 2016 study from OSU that followed roughly 3000 retirees’ health from 1992 on found that the age of retirement was directly correlated with lifespan. The range of retirement ages in the study was 53 to 79 with the average at 65 years old. They found that retiring one year later was associated with a 9% lower mortality risk, and specifically that delaying retirement age from 65 to 66 resulted in an 11% drop in mortality rates.

This study corroborates past research and makes practical sense. Work keeps your mind and body active. It also helps keep you socially engaged. For most people, the majority of their social life is structured around work. When they leave the workforce they leave behind their friends and daily structure. They develop more sedentary lifestyles, and no longer have a ready source of mental stimulation. More importantly, they often leave behind their purpose.

Work for fun, not for money

So am I saying that all this FIRE stuff is bunk and you should just live it up now and work your 9-5 job until you die? No, of course not! The problem is that our definition of work has been tainted by the Fall of Man. We think of work as toil and pain that we perform grudgingly because we need the money. But that’s not how it was originally intended. Adam didn’t need money; he didn’t even need to tend the Garden. The trees were already there and they produced fruit on their own. The purpose of tending the Garden was to have something to enjoy and fulfill him.

If we worked for the joy of it rather than just for the paycheck, we get that joy and fulfillment that comes with a hard day’s work without feeling like we have to do it just to survive. You’ve heard the old adage: “Do what you love and you’ll never work a day in your life”. While that’s terrible advice to give an 18 year-old deciding what major to enroll in, there is some truth to it.

That’s where FIRE comes in. When you are in the wealth accumulation stage of your FIRE journey, work hard at a job that pays. Save what you can in order to reach financial independence. After that keep working, for the fulfillment and joy and meaning it brings. FIRE gives you the opportunity to do what you love, because you’ve saved enough to be free from working just to survive.

Why keep working if I can retire? The answer is two-fold.

First off, man was designed to work. Not working ignores a fundamental part of what makes us human. It’s like ignoring the fact that sweet food brings us joy or need human interaction, it rarely turns out well. There’s a reason depression is more of a problem in developed countries. Having something to work towards gives us something to live for. Personally some of my happiest days are the ones I spend hauling furniture and helping people move, and the most depressing days are the ones where I sit around doing nothing or watching TV. Meaningful work is an incredibly powerful source of happiness.

Secondly, having extra cash you don’t need is great for those less fortunate than yourselves. Imagine how much good you could do in this world if you could donate your entire paycheck to charity. For example sharethemeal.org says for $0.80 you can feed a child for a day. feedthechildren.org says for $34/month you can provide food, water, and education to third world countries. onetreeplanted.org will plant a tree for $1. Not to mention all the good you could do in your own family or community.

But, I hear you about to say, what if I hate my job?

That’s alright, the point of FIRE is that you don’t have to work a job you hate, because you don’t have to work for money. Once you’ve reached FI you can leave that job to pursue something else. That something could be another job, or you may volunteer for a charity, or learn an instrument, or start a business. The possibilities are endless because you don’t have to work for a paycheck.

Don’t just rot away in a cubicle, get out there and work hard at something you’ve always wanted to do, and if you work hard enough at it, someone might pay you for it. Elon Musk “retired” (read: was fired) from PayPal in 2000 and when eBay bought it in 2002, Musk ended up with $180 million.

In his 2012 commencement speech to Cal Tech Elon Musk said, “Going from PayPal, I thought, ‘Well, what are some of the other problems that are likely to most affect the future of humanity?’ It really wasn’t from the perspective of what’s the … best way to make money.” He decided the big problems to solve were sustainable energy and space travel so In 2002 He founded SpaceX and in 2003 he founded Tesla.

Elon Musk is a perfect example of this mentality. He had more than enough to retire and sip cocktails on the beach forever, but he knew that he was driven to work and that there were problems that needed to be solved. And since he didn’t need to think about the “best way to make money” he could focus on trying to good in the world even if it wasn’t profitable. And as icing on the cake, Tesla and SpaceX are both successful companies and Musk is the richest man in the world.

What else is there?

If you work your dream job, you shouldn't retire early.
Source: xkcd.com

When you don’t work for money you can really focus on working for good

All of this isn’t to say I haven’t entertained the idea of retiring early. But, again, if I did it wouldn’t be to sip cocktails on the beach. It would be to pursue something else. For example I’ve always wanted to publish a video game and the current indie scene is ripe for making games. I’ve also considered writing a Biblical commentary or other theology book.

Whatever your hand finds to do, do it with all your might; for there is no activity or planning or knowledge or wisdom in Sheol where you are going.

Ecclesiastes 9:10

Solomon said whatever work you do, do it will all your might. While you’re still working towards financial independence, that will most likely be your day job. But after reaching FI the sky’s the limit. Find the next goal/adventure to work towards. Retire early if you want, but never stop working!

What do you think? Is it worth working to do more good in the world? Let us know in the comments below!

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How to Retire Early on a Single Income (Part 2)

As I said last time in Part 1, by and large, we are a typical Midwestern family. Full disclosure however, I have a career in STEM. So while I don’t make nearly as much as my counterparts on the east or west coasts, I do make an above average salary for the Midwest. I want to acknowledge that for all that my journey isn’t going to look like Mr. Money Mustache’s, your journey may very well not look like mine. How does a typical family like mine retire early on a single income?

And yet while not unimportant, your annual salary doesn’t determine when you can retire. The length of your working career is determined by your savings rate, or the ratio of your savings to your earnings. For example, if you earn $50,000/year and save $10,000/year your savings rate is 20%. The higher your savings rate, the quicker you can retire. Let’s see how this works by taking a look at two examples.

A Doctor and a Plumber

Exhibit A: A high-earning doctor who makes $300,000/year. He’s doing pretty good financially, but let’s say he spends $280,000/year. Divide 280,000/300,000 and you get a spending rate of 94% and a savings rate of 6%. He may make 5X’s the national average salary but he will have to work for 50 years to be able to retire because of his lavish lifestyle.

Exhibit B: A plumber who makes $50,000/year, but only spends $35,000. His savings rate is 30%, and he will only need to work for 24 years before being able to retire. The plumber may only make 1/6 the salary of the doctor, but he can quit the workforce in half the time by merely keeping his spending under control.

Exhibit A                                              Exhibit B                                 

To reach a 30% savings rate the doctor would only have to cut his spending by 25%. That means a 25% decrease in spending leads to a 52% decrease in the amount of time you need to work. This is an exponential decline in the amount of time needed to retire because boosting your savings rate has the double effect of both increasing the money you put into your nest egg and decreasing the amount you spend, thus decreasing the amount you’ll need for retirement.

Early Retirement in the Midwest

In 2018 the median household income in the Midwest was $64,069/year (source), and the average consumer spending was $59,909 (source). If we divide spending by income we get a spending rate of 93.5% and a savings rate of 6.5%. If we assume that everything not spent is put into a retirement account that returns 7% (the market average accounting for inflation), we come to the conclusion that the average Midwesterner can retire in 48 years 4months. Almost 50 years is a long time to work.

It will take the doctor 48 years to retire.
Source: networthify.com

Now let’s do the math using the spending that I calculated in Part 1 of this post. I estimated our family’s spending to be about $43,200/year. If we divide $43,200 by $64,069 (the average Midwestern income, not our actual income), we get a spending rate of 67.4% and a savings rate of 32.6%. If that $20,869 is put into a retirement account returning 7%, it will only take 23 years to be able to have enough to retire. And if I adjust the median income for inflation to 2020 dollars I get less than 21 years!

It will only take the plumber 23 years to retire.
Source: networthify.com

That being said, I’m not planning to retire in 20 years, at least not at this moment. We’ll see what God brings in the future, but I’m content to keep working. One of the reasons for that is that we plan to have more kids so expenses will increase, and we also still plan to give money to church and other charities. We donated about $10,000 last year so if I add that to the $43,200 budget, the time calculates to a little over 30 years. That’s not retiring super early, but it’s quite a bit less than the average.

Anyone Can Retire Early on a Single Income

The current average retirement age is 65 for men and 63 for women. If you were born after 1960, the full retirement age is 67 if you want to receive full benefits from Social Security. That means if you started working at 18 the government expects you to work for 49 years. That is a long time to be slaving away for the Man. Retiring in 20, 30, or even 40 years is still retiring early.

A 25% decrease in spending leads to a 52% decrease in the amount of time you need to work.

Be responsible with your money, be frugal, but don’t feel like you need to scrimp and save every cent you make. It may mean you retire later than other FIRE followers, but so what? It’s your money and your life. Make your money work for you in a way that allows you to live the lifestyle you want. If you can do that, you’ve won.

Not everyone has a large salary, but by following some of the tips I laid out in Part 1 of this post and being diligent about only spending your money on what’s important, even a typical family with children can save for early retirement on a modest income.

What do you think? What’s a major expense for you? Or what have you sacrificed to reach financial independence? Let us know in the comments below!