โApr-14-2015 07:01 PM
โApr-15-2015 06:27 PM
โApr-15-2015 01:50 PM
โApr-15-2015 12:53 PM
wbwood wrote:Muddydogs wrote:mich800 wrote:Muddydogs wrote:
Personally I think if you have to go through all this you probably shouldn't purchase an RV. Can you afford the monthly loan payment, insurance and storage fees? If so then everything else will work itself out. In the end are you putting a price on family fun and enjoying life because tomorrow you might not be around.
You don't need to purchase everything at once, a sewer hose, water hose and a few wood blocks will get you camping then other stuff can be acquired over time. Are you storing the unit under cover or purchasing a new unit? If so then you don't need to pay for a roof check twice a year for the first couple years and you can do the checking if you are able to get on the roof anyway.
That is crazy. Are you saying only the irresponsible use budgets? I was taught the opposite.
No, not sure how you pulled that out? Do you budget for home repairs? What happens if your washer dies tomorrow?
What I am saying is why budget for stuff 5 years down the road or more? If you can afford the initial costs and have enough money in your pocket to put gas in the truck to go camping without eating noodles all week then you are probably ok. A couple posts mentioned food costs, well you have to eat either way so why would that even be a consideration.
Not a good example about the washer. Your washer will not need routine things done like an RV will. And even for the costs of just tires for an RV in about 5 years or so, you can replace your washer/dryer set with a rela nice washer/dryer set. And yes, those that budget, generally set aside a budget or means or replacing things as they happen. Much different for replacing appliances that you almost is nearly a necessity (unless you have other means of washing clothes) and spending $20,000-100,000 on something that is not a necessity. Especially if you are spending every extra penny on the RV, storage and insurance. It leaves you with no operating costs. Now w ecan sit here and argue whether or not one should even consider doing it if it will stretch them out. But that's their personal choice. Many don't believe in financing. Many don't believe in paying to store it elsewhere. And many believe in budgeting and knowing where just about every cent is going. I've never heard a "financial guru" ever tell anyone not to do a budget...
โApr-15-2015 12:41 PM
Veik wrote:beemerphile1 wrote:
I'm curious, you are considering financing an RV at $350 per month for 15 years = $63,000 Since you don't have land to park it there will be storage on top of insurance for another $27,000
My question is, do you also finance (borrow) the money for your current non-RVing vacations?
I couldn't sleep at night if I had to borrow that money and pay those amounts in order to own a depreciating asset.
Maybe a less expensive RV would be in order. Even renting an RV might be an option.
Hopefully you realize that no one can tell you what you will spend on RVing. I had no idea what the cost was when we started and I had been a tent camper for many years. To be honest, I still don't know what the cost is because I don't track the expenses.
yup, vacations go on credit card, credit card paid in full every month, and points earned get rolled into future vacation.
Free stays, free flights, etc.
โApr-15-2015 12:26 PM
beemerphile1 wrote:
I'm curious, you are considering financing an RV at $350 per month for 15 years = $63,000 Since you don't have land to park it there will be storage on top of insurance for another $27,000
My question is, do you also finance (borrow) the money for your current non-RVing vacations?
I couldn't sleep at night if I had to borrow that money and pay those amounts in order to own a depreciating asset.
Maybe a less expensive RV would be in order. Even renting an RV might be an option.
Hopefully you realize that no one can tell you what you will spend on RVing. I had no idea what the cost was when we started and I had been a tent camper for many years. To be honest, I still don't know what the cost is because I don't track the expenses.
โApr-15-2015 12:23 PM
โApr-15-2015 11:24 AM
Muddydogs wrote:mich800 wrote:Muddydogs wrote:
Personally I think if you have to go through all this you probably shouldn't purchase an RV. Can you afford the monthly loan payment, insurance and storage fees? If so then everything else will work itself out. In the end are you putting a price on family fun and enjoying life because tomorrow you might not be around.
You don't need to purchase everything at once, a sewer hose, water hose and a few wood blocks will get you camping then other stuff can be acquired over time. Are you storing the unit under cover or purchasing a new unit? If so then you don't need to pay for a roof check twice a year for the first couple years and you can do the checking if you are able to get on the roof anyway.
That is crazy. Are you saying only the irresponsible use budgets? I was taught the opposite.
No, not sure how you pulled that out? Do you budget for home repairs? What happens if your washer dies tomorrow?
What I am saying is why budget for stuff 5 years down the road or more? If you can afford the initial costs and have enough money in your pocket to put gas in the truck to go camping without eating noodles all week then you are probably ok. A couple posts mentioned food costs, well you have to eat either way so why would that even be a consideration.
โApr-15-2015 11:18 AM
Muddydogs wrote:mich800 wrote:Muddydogs wrote:
Personally I think if you have to go through all this you probably shouldn't purchase an RV. Can you afford the monthly loan payment, insurance and storage fees? If so then everything else will work itself out. In the end are you putting a price on family fun and enjoying life because tomorrow you might not be around.
You don't need to purchase everything at once, a sewer hose, water hose and a few wood blocks will get you camping then other stuff can be acquired over time. Are you storing the unit under cover or purchasing a new unit? If so then you don't need to pay for a roof check twice a year for the first couple years and you can do the checking if you are able to get on the roof anyway.
That is crazy. Are you saying only the irresponsible use budgets? I was taught the opposite.
No, not sure how you pulled that out? Do you budget for home repairs? What happens if your washer dies tomorrow?
What I am saying is why budget for stuff 5 years down the road or more? If you can afford the initial costs and have enough money in your pocket to put gas in the truck to go camping without eating noodles all week then you are probably ok. A couple posts mentioned food costs, well you have to eat either way so why would that even be a consideration.
โApr-15-2015 11:08 AM
jplante4 wrote:
Rather than budget, I prioritize. I have 3 lists; stuff that must be done, stuff that should be done and stuff that would be nice to do. If I ever have money left over after the "stuff that must be done" list is done, I'll let you know how this scheme works.
โApr-15-2015 11:02 AM
mich800 wrote:Muddydogs wrote:
Personally I think if you have to go through all this you probably shouldn't purchase an RV. Can you afford the monthly loan payment, insurance and storage fees? If so then everything else will work itself out. In the end are you putting a price on family fun and enjoying life because tomorrow you might not be around.
You don't need to purchase everything at once, a sewer hose, water hose and a few wood blocks will get you camping then other stuff can be acquired over time. Are you storing the unit under cover or purchasing a new unit? If so then you don't need to pay for a roof check twice a year for the first couple years and you can do the checking if you are able to get on the roof anyway.
That is crazy. Are you saying only the irresponsible use budgets? I was taught the opposite.
โApr-15-2015 10:59 AM
โApr-15-2015 10:56 AM
Veik wrote:wbwood wrote:Muddydogs wrote:
Personally I think if you have to go through all this you probably shouldn't purchase an RV. Can you afford the monthly loan payment, insurance and storage fees? If so then everything else will work itself out. In the end are you putting a price on family fun and enjoying life because tomorrow you might not be around.
You don't need to purchase everything at once, a sewer hose, water hose and a few wood blocks will get you camping then other stuff can be acquired over time. Are you storing the unit under cover or purchasing a new unit? If so then you don't need to pay for a roof check twice a year for the first couple years and you can do the checking if you are able to get on the roof anyway.
I think you have to look at the whole picture. If you can just afford the payment, insurance and storage and that's it, then you will have a rude awakening when you do need to buy tires as an example. Time on that would depend on the tires of the unit they bought. If a new unit, then they have 5 yrs or so. If a used unit, then maybe not that long or even half that long. Would suck to be making financing payment, inusrance payment and storage payment on a hunk of metal that you can't afford to move.
Exactly.
I am trying to compare a RV investment to an investment of 2-3 long vacations we currently take per year.
โApr-15-2015 10:26 AM
Veik wrote:wbwood wrote:Muddydogs wrote:
Personally I think if you have to go through all this you probably shouldn't purchase an RV. Can you afford the monthly loan payment, insurance and storage fees? If so then everything else will work itself out. In the end are you putting a price on family fun and enjoying life because tomorrow you might not be around.
You don't need to purchase everything at once, a sewer hose, water hose and a few wood blocks will get you camping then other stuff can be acquired over time. Are you storing the unit under cover or purchasing a new unit? If so then you don't need to pay for a roof check twice a year for the first couple years and you can do the checking if you are able to get on the roof anyway.
I think you have to look at the whole picture. If you can just afford the payment, insurance and storage and that's it, then you will have a rude awakening when you do need to buy tires as an example. Time on that would depend on the tires of the unit they bought. If a new unit, then they have 5 yrs or so. If a used unit, then maybe not that long or even half that long. Would suck to be making financing payment, inusrance payment and storage payment on a hunk of metal that you can't afford to move.
Exactly.
I am trying to compare a RV investment to an investment of 2-3 long vacations we currently take per year.
โApr-15-2015 10:11 AM