R56 Financing with PenFed
This is my first time using them, but in general it is hard to go wrong with a credit union. I work for a national lab (connected with the University of California) and we have a couple credit unions. In fact, I checked those rates first but the Pentagon credit union came out on top.
Cheers-
Cheers-
Thanks for that link Weinerdog....cute dog!
Also thanks to whomever posted this information. I might just have to apply to see if I can get this low low rate and then go back to the dealership and see if they can match or lower it :D
I like this place already!!!
Also thanks to whomever posted this information. I might just have to apply to see if I can get this low low rate and then go back to the dealership and see if they can match or lower it :D
I like this place already!!!
Nope, that's a myth... http://money.cnn.com/2005/03/16/pf/debt/creditscore/
+1 Amen to that. The closest BMW could get was 4.95 vs 4.25% for mine
Well we shall see what the new rates are come June 1st....Unfortunately I can't get this rate (4.25%) until I have a VIN # and final bill of sale and that won't be for about another month or so.....
hopefully the FED will cut rates and not raise them!
hopefully the FED will cut rates and not raise them!
Ok I have what might be a stupid question. It's been a long time since I bought a car, in fact this is my first brand new car :D. Say I have a 6 year loan but pay it off early will that save me money? Someone told me that they take the interest out first when you make payments....so the first year of paying off your loan is only going towards the interest. Is that true? I'm a bit overwhelmed at the moment.
Last edited by jjp007; May 27, 2008 at 04:40 PM.
Same for me.....but I don't think I will be getting my car until July. Cross your fingers!!
Ok I have what might be a stupid question. It's been a long time since I bought a car, in fact this is my first brand new car :D. Say I have a 6 year loan but pay it off early will that save me money? Someone told me that they take the interest out first when you make payments....so the first year of paying off your loan is only going towards the interest. Is that true? I'm a bit overwhelmed at the moment.
Ok I have what might be a stupid question. It's been a long time since I bought a car, in fact this is my first brand new car :D. Say I have a 6 year loan but pay it off early will that save me money? Someone told me that they take the interest out first when you make payments....so the first year of paying off your loan is only going towards the interest. Is that true? I'm a bit overwhelmed at the moment.
If you are looking to pay it off early you will not only save some money on the interest but increase your credit score as well. When you pay back a loan you pay off the new interest that has accrued and whatever is left over is applied toward the principal but every month you've paid off more of the principal (just a little) so the interest is not as high as the last month's but your payment is the same so you pay off more principal etc....at least with a car loan you see the principal lowering....my 30 yr fixed mortgage doesn't ever seem to move!
Paying off your loan early will save you money. No the first years payments on the loan do not go to interest. They go to both Interest and Payment. Here's what happens: You borrow $10,000 (the principle) interest starts building on it from the day you sign the loan paperwork. When you make a payment the interest that has built up is subtracted from your payment, and the remainder is subtracted from the principal. Then interest begins building based on the new principal amount. Example: (#s off the top of my head) You send in a payment of 400$ 30 days after you take out your loan. Lets say the interest is 100$ the left over amount of $300 is applied to the principal. The next month when you send in 400$ because your principal went down so does the interest that could have built up. They take out 97$ in interest, and 303$ goes to the principal. The Next month 95$ goes to interest.... ect.... If you want to pay off your car early the best way to do it is to know what your regular monthly payment amount and always send in more. That extra money should be going to your Principal amount. If the loan company sends you a bill for less than the monthly payment, always send more. I used to work at Ford Motor Credit and we always applied the overpayment to the principal, however we sent them a bill with the over payment amount subtracted from the next months amount due. If the customer paid that lesser amount they just undid some of the good they did by sending in the extra money. (big block of text, sorry, will need to figure out line breaks later need to go now....)
Last edited by Metalsmith; May 27, 2008 at 05:20 PM.
Paying off your loan early will save you money. No the first years payments on the loan do not go to interest. They go to both Interest and Payment. Here's what happens: You borrow $10,000 (the principle) interest starts building on it from the day you sign the loan paperwork. When you make a payment the interest that has built up is subtracted from your payment, and the remainder is subtracted from the principal. Then interest begins building based on the new principal amount. Example: (#s off the top of my head) You send in a payment of 400$ 30 days after you take out your loan. Lets say the interest is 100$ the left over amount of $300 is applied to the principal. The next month when you send in 400$ because your principal went down so does the interest that could have built up. They take out 97$ in interest, and 303$ goes to the principal. The Next month 95$ goes to interest.... ect.... If you want to pay off your car early the best way to do it is to know what your regular monthly payment amount and always send in more. That extra money should be going to your Principal amount. If the loan company sends you a bill for less than the monthly payment, always send more. I used to work at Ford Motor Credit and we always applied the overpayment to the principal, however we sent them a bill with the over payment amount subtracted from the next months amount due. If the customer paid that lesser amount they just undid some of the good they did by sending in the extra money. (big block of text, sorry, will need to figure out line breaks later need to go now....)
Thanks, that made perfect sense!
Good information!
Here's a site that might help:
http://www.bankrate.com/brm/calculators/autos.asp
On the left side of the page is an auto loan payment calculator. Not only can it tell you how much your monthly payments will be (based off what you enter) but it also tells you how much the interest is month by month for the life of the loan. And you can also plug in different dollar amounts to see how much you will save if you increase the payments a little. Very useful-
Here's a site that might help:
http://www.bankrate.com/brm/calculators/autos.asp
On the left side of the page is an auto loan payment calculator. Not only can it tell you how much your monthly payments will be (based off what you enter) but it also tells you how much the interest is month by month for the life of the loan. And you can also plug in different dollar amounts to see how much you will save if you increase the payments a little. Very useful-
This is a great place. Not only do we have the coolest cars around, but we share the love too! 
I just used the calculator to add $115 extra to my monthly. It showed I would pay the car off a year early and save $695!!! I plan to add more than that so will save even more.

I just used the calculator to add $115 extra to my monthly. It showed I would pay the car off a year early and save $695!!! I plan to add more than that so will save even more.
Thanks mysticturner for the feedback. Did I mention your car rules
There was a bit on CNN about this last week also. I didn't know about how they can penalize you for consolidating your credit cards onto one card, or essentially downsizing your options. Example: You have 3 cards with a 10k limit each and $4,500 in total charges. So you try to be responsible and consolidate them into one and cut up the other two. Well, they supposedly see that as you being much closer to being 'maxed out'(only $5500 in available vs. $25,500 of course), therefore your score is presumably lower. Seems ****-backwards to me, but oh well. That's why my better half handles all the $$
There was a bit on CNN about this last week also. I didn't know about how they can penalize you for consolidating your credit cards onto one card, or essentially downsizing your options. Example: You have 3 cards with a 10k limit each and $4,500 in total charges. So you try to be responsible and consolidate them into one and cut up the other two. Well, they supposedly see that as you being much closer to being 'maxed out'(only $5500 in available vs. $25,500 of course), therefore your score is presumably lower. Seems ****-backwards to me, but oh well. That's why my better half handles all the $$
Same for me.....but I don't think I will be getting my car until July. Cross your fingers!!
Ok I have what might be a stupid question. It's been a long time since I bought a car, in fact this is my first brand new car :D. Say I have a 6 year loan but pay it off early will that save me money? Someone told me that they take the interest out first when you make payments....so the first year of paying off your loan is only going towards the interest. Is that true? I'm a bit overwhelmed at the moment.
Ok I have what might be a stupid question. It's been a long time since I bought a car, in fact this is my first brand new car :D. Say I have a 6 year loan but pay it off early will that save me money? Someone told me that they take the interest out first when you make payments....so the first year of paying off your loan is only going towards the interest. Is that true? I'm a bit overwhelmed at the moment.
Thanks mysticturner for the feedback. Did I mention your car rules
There was a bit on CNN about this last week also. I didn't know about how they can penalize you for consolidating your credit cards onto one card, or essentially downsizing your options. Example: You have 3 cards with a 10k limit each and $4,500 in total charges. So you try to be responsible and consolidate them into one and cut up the other two. Well, they supposedly see that as you being much closer to being 'maxed out'(only $5500 in available vs. $25,500 of course), therefore your score is presumably lower. Seems ****-backwards to me, but oh well. That's why my better half handles all the $$
There was a bit on CNN about this last week also. I didn't know about how they can penalize you for consolidating your credit cards onto one card, or essentially downsizing your options. Example: You have 3 cards with a 10k limit each and $4,500 in total charges. So you try to be responsible and consolidate them into one and cut up the other two. Well, they supposedly see that as you being much closer to being 'maxed out'(only $5500 in available vs. $25,500 of course), therefore your score is presumably lower. Seems ****-backwards to me, but oh well. That's why my better half handles all the $$
It should be noted that I joined the PFCU and they ran a HARD credit report on me BEFORE I even applied (haven't applied yet) for the car loan. All I did was gave them the $5 to put in the account. I have Triple Alert Redemption and got an email showing that they made an inquiry.
Just throwing it out there!
Just throwing it out there!
I got the rewards gas card a few days ago and used it yesterday, 5% cash back sounds great to me, + 2% on supermarkets? It's wonderful !



