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Will someone please buy my SUV

Posted May 26 2008, 02:59 PM by Karen Datko
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As the price of gas goes up, many people's desire to own a big honking SUV heads south. And so may be the value of that SUV sitting in your driveway.

A growing number of SUV owners are finding that they owe more on their vehicles than they're now worth. And those folks are going to have a heck of a time getting rid of them at a satisfactory price.

This from CNN:

Owners might owe $20,000 or more when the vehicle is now worth $12,000. It's similar to an upside-down mortgage, and it may not make sense to try a trade-in. "What they might be doing is spending thousands of dollars to save hundreds," says Jack Nerad, the executive director of Kelley Blue Book's kbb.com. "Because if you make a trade, you're most often going to spend more to make that move than you would just sucking it up and paying the extra gasoline prices."

Behind the Wheel blogger Phil LeBeau writes about an SUV-owning friend who can't find a buyer at a price the friend will accept. Phil says, "He's not alone. ... As one dealer on the East Coast told me, 'Selling an SUV now is about as tough as it was to sell a compact car in the late '90s when sport utes were red hot.'"

What's going on here?

A recent AAA survey found that fuel economy is now consumers' top consideration when buying a car, and the huge growth in sales of compact and subcompact cars demonstrates that. (Last time we checked, AAA said gas had surpassed $4 a gallon in seven states.)

Factor in supply (lots of SUVs for sale) with demand (people don't want them). The craigslist blog said in late April that listings in the "cars and trucks" category and for RVs were up 120% and 100%, respectively, from eight months earlier. 

Plus, to inject a little humor here, driving a gas guzzler is a turnoff. "What do women find sexy? Hybrids. They're chick magnets," writes Chuck Squatriglia at Wired. "So says a survey by General Motors that found nearly nine in 10 women would rather talk to a guy in a Prius than a Porsche."

What should you do? Keep your gas hog, as Nerad of kbb.com suggests, and find ways to reduce your gas consumption. If you can unload your gas guzzler, try to reduce the damage by replacing it with a small used car. You don't want to end up like blogger "SingleGuyMoney," who kept rolling what he owed on his previous car into the loan for each new car -- essentially creating a monster 12-year car loan. Congrats to him for recently paying it off.

Comments

 

Well I own a YUKON and I love it!!!! I need the room due to large family. One thing that saves me is my YUKON is PAID for!!!! I'm lucky that I don't have payments, so there for I"m able to afford my gas for my YUKON. I have slowed down in driving and I have stopped making more then one trip when doing errands. I would like to have a small SUV or car, but having 4 kids I need the room. I have owned VANS and I still own a VAN, but due to health it's also easier for me to get in and out of the YUKON. I will not give up my YUKON anytime soon.

I love ppl who think that SUVs a lot safer than compacts.

COMPACT will never roll over on you! COMPACTS are easier to stop!

It's does not matter how many stars SUVs or compacts have in crash tests. What is matter is pure statistics how many accidents were made by SUVs and how many by COMPACTS. According to my observation - you have better chance to live longer if you have small and not that fast car...

My SUV is for weekends only and I knew that when I bought a year ago when gas was just over $3 a gallon.  The trends were already there on gas prices.  A purchase of a SUV should be for a reason just like when you buy that sports car that the kids cannot fit in and costs a fortune on repair parts.  Any car purchase should be based on good sense, actual need and long term use.  We drive our cars for at least 150,000 - 200,000 miles and take care of them which gives us max fuel usage.  My SUV is the family carpool vehicle and we all travel together for groceries and errands.  Imagine the cost to drive 2 cars versus one.  Do not sell SUV owners short.  Not all of us are on ego trips.

Our fuel efficient car is the Suburban (other is a F350 diesel). We bought our cars not for the image, but their use. Before we had kids (up through 2004, and long after SUVs were the 'cool' cars), we were fine with the big truck for hauling toys (RV's, motorcycles and boats), and a used honda civic 4 door for commuting - and we carpooled. But an active family with 2 kids and 3 labrador retrievers that spend a lot of time outdoors either boating, camping, hunting, riding dirt bikes, or playing in the snow needs room for all the stuff. We looked at hybrid SUVs when we bought the suburban. The only available was the ford escape with horrible safety ratings. We couldn't fit half of what we need in a compact car. There's many times when the suburban is still too small. The $100 to fill up the suburban is cheaper than the $140 to put diesel in the truck. We do miss the days when diesel was cheaper than gas...

I drive a 2006 Hummer H2 SUT (12 to 13 mpg) and honestly don't mind paying the gas prices.  For starteres, fuel costs are only approximately 1/3 the total cost of driving a vehicle.  Luckily, I owe very little to the bank due to a substantial down payment, and full coverage insurance is much cheaper than on our other vehicle.  I have also saved huge amounts of shipping costs for my business pulling our own trailer the last couple years.

Yeah, there is nothing fun about $4.00 gas, but that and insurance will be most of my driving costs in a few months.  I guess it is all in the perspective your approaching $4.00 gas from.  And at least I have not had to spend $3,500 to replace my transmission each of the last few years like I did in my previously owned  Dodge Ram pickup.

Try contacting GEAR VENDERS, look at their website. Increases milage up to 25%.

Hey Nepolean Black.....that's right...everyone who bought an SUV did it for ego.  You prove your ignorance by your words.  And some of us arent' upside down or owe anything on our SUV.

I have a wife & 2 kids & relatives that live in other states...we go visit quite a bit.  Could I possibly fit all of our crap in a Prius or Civic Hybrid? Along with that, I use it to periodically pull either a 16' or 20' trailer.  Let's hook that up to the hybrid & see what happens.  Or better yet, stuff 4 suitcases and a set of golf clubs and Christmas presents into the back of the Prius or Civic and see if it fits.  

There are those of us who purchase the SUV because it fits what we need, not because of ego or because my friends bought one & now I have to have one.  If you honestly buy your vehicle because of ego or you want to keep up with your buddies, you are not real smart.  It's real simple, purchase the vehicle that best fits your situation.  

I work at a car dealership and I run and hide when a big truck or sport utility pulls in because most of the time these people just leave mad because they are not getting enough for there trade in. You send these trade ins to the auction and they come right back because no one will bid on them. The laws of supply and demand.........

There are several issues here. First, people are buying more home and car than they can afford. Second, Our Congress is the bigest reason gas is where it is. The do nothing Congress who wants to blame big oil for there inaction. Supply and demand!

I have also noticed the larger the vehicle the more aggressive the driver, especially lately....I hope they get more tickets for their reckless driving, to top it off, it is still mostly a single person going to the store, this nonsense about needing an SUV to pull a boat is nonsense, maybe 1% of the time are SUVs used for intended purposes; you can rent a vehicle for less....same thing with trucks, unless you are a contractor, drive a car like every other common-sense individual...the larger the vehicle, the tinier the )*% still applies....overcompensation.....now you are getting hosed...ha....

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