Thank you for the recommendation! I’m there with you. But the second I got into a Porsche and drove it the car sold itself. But I’m most certainly going to keep this as an option.
Thanks!
Thank you for the recommendation! I’m there with you. But the second I got into a Porsche and drove it the car sold itself. But I’m most certainly going to keep this as an option.
Thanks!
What .00320 for tier 3 credit tells me is that you’re lighting money on fire by leasing this vehicle before repairing your credit.
This is great, thank you for the great info! I will go ahead and try that! I do have a quote for the 39 months and it barely made a difference as you can see in the picture above. $9 per month.
Any chance you know good MF on tier 3 credit? Would you consider .00320 as fair?
Thanks again!
Ironically I decided to lease/buy a car as a form of repairing/improving my score because I know I can make the monthly payments. I’m fairly fresh out of college and credit cards are not doing it for my credit.
But I do agree!
Are you dead set on the Macan or are you open to other luxury SUVs that have better pricing and MF, given your credit?
Sure, but a Porsche isn’t the place to be looking
If I were in your shoes, I would focus on bringing this up to at least 720 before looking at leasing a Porsche. My $0.02.
Here were my other options… x3M, Q5/Q7, Velar (terrible), GLE (terrible). Did not fit well in the x3M but loved the performance. SQ5 felt very similar to X3M. none of the cars felt as they made me comfortable to drive for 3 years except for the Macan…
At the end of the day, you need to figure out what’s more important - working to improve your credit or paying a boat load for a loaner Porsche, even if you can afford it. Good luck.
Porsche wants dealers to remain exclusive. So if you don’t want to pay it, they will find someone who will. It is not like BMW where they need to sell 25 X3s to earn a huge bonus. With that said, I think you can get it down to .003
Your other other option is to hold off on make a luxury purchase until you have your financial ducks in a row, particularly when the cost of that luxury purchase is compounded by not having your ducks in a row.