Alright, here it is: I'm a former service member. I have driven off and on the last 4 years.
I've got good driving experience, clean record,honorable discharge, bad credit, and some money down, but not the 3-5k all dealers seem to demand.
I am not even making ends meet anymore as a company driver on a bad account. I need to buy or lease, but can't OFTEN even save any money.
P.s. No need for comments from the internet tough guys who troll the web searching for people to pick on.
Trying to finance a truck with bad credit.
Discussion in 'Ask An Owner Operator' started by ArmyVetTrucker, Aug 29, 2017.
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Have you looked at getting onto a better company gig so you can bank some coin ?
Tb0n3, Broke Down 69, Cottonmouth85 and 2 others Thank this. -
The company where I'm leased has a good track record of lease purchase guys paying off their truck. pm me for more info.
Veteran friendly carrier.Grubby, Broke Down 69 and Cottonmouth85 Thank this. -
You're going to need a minimum of $20K or so in the bank before you even think about it. If you don't even have enough for a $5K down payment, even if you could get somebody to loan you the money, you'll never make it.
Best to find you a good driving job and save up some more money.BoostedTeg, dunchues, Broke Down 69 and 4 others Thank this. -
IF you do like a L/P from a company, even the coolest company, your still basically an indentured servant until that truck is paid for.
$3K to $5K, I'm assuming your looking at Lone Mountain or some other leasing companies, which is not a totally bad option, as long as you go some place that is all O/O.
There are lots of company jobs, that pay ok if your willing to go OTR or regional. Go to Schneider or some place, save some money, and get your credit straitened out.
You will be way, way ahead if you can purchase the truck right from a dealer or someone like Penske.
An O/O with a used truck, you better save every penny, your gonna need it.
I know I give my very best effort, and there are so many dillweeds encountered, bad brokers, bad mechanics, everything is e log now, no cheating, that it takes a lot of effort. A lot of effort.
You want to start with a decent truck, not the cheapest POS on the lot cause that's all you can get, cause your just setting yourself up for disaster if you do that.
I see guys try to break in with $3K month payments. Good luck with that.TallJoe, Broke Down 69 and bigtssa Thank this. -
Bad credit and no money to operate with is your down fall. If your not making it as a company driver, switch jobs. Buying your own truck I don't feel will solve your problems. Believe me.Last edited by a moderator: Aug 30, 2017
dunchues, Broke Down 69, Roberts450 and 3 others Thank this. -
ALSO, contrary to popular belief, some of us who were forcibly honirably retired, didnt have the years in service to make enough money from it to even have savings. I would imagine you cant comprehend, but if you can, and you see my plight then respond. If not, I say good day to you. -
You are financially and mentally not ready.
I wish you the best.ChaoSS, dunchues, Broke Down 69 and 2 others Thank this. -
They are not shooting you down. Here is an example. You spend you cash on a down payment, you get a used truck, probably with no warranty. You may be able to wrench on it yourself, but parts alone can be high dollar. Especially if you break down on the road. In the last 6 months, to make sure I don't break down in the road, I've replaced turbo $760, water pump $200, drive tires $3400, belts $100, suspension parts $200, radiator $800, Charge cooler, $1000 plus, AC condenser, tranny cooler, clutch and transmission $4500, u joints, $300. And that was all me doing to work myself. If any one of those things go down on the road, triple some of those numbers. I did all that before things went bad. Where will your funds come from. I've trucked when money was tight, and let me tell you, it's not fun going down the road thinking, if anything goes wrong today, how do I pay for it? Am I going to loose everything? How will my family feel if I do? NOT FUN. Now you might say, I'm going to get a truck with warranty, great, but warranty doesn't pay down time, and that can be weeks with NO income. Then truck payment is due. They are not trying to stop you, they are trying to keep you from failing like so many others before you. Good luck and we appreciate your service. Thank youLast edited: Aug 30, 2017
TallJoe, poppapump1332, kemosabi49 and 3 others Thank this.
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