For years, one simple rule helped people buy a car without wrecking their budget. People call it the 20-4-10 rule.
The rule asks for three things. Put 20% down, finance for four years or less, and keep car costs under 10% of your pay.
Follow it on a used car today, and you'd need to earn about $120,000 a year. Most households don't come close.
The Rule Was Built For A Cheaper Car Market
Planners have leaned on the 20-4-10 rule for years, and it works like a guardrail. A big down payment and a short loan keep you from owing more than the car is worth.
The rule didn't change, but car prices did.
"The 20-4-10 rule isn't wrong. It's calibrated for a car market that no longer exists," said Jeff Judge, a planner at Chesapeake Financial Planners.
Hardly anyone even hits the four-year part now. Just 5.6% of new car loans ran 48 months last year.
The 10% cap is the real wall. Add up a used car payment, insurance, gas, and upkeep, and you reach about $996 a month.
To stay under that cap, you'd need roughly $120,000 in income. A new car pushes the bar to about $175,000.
That's the problem, since the typical household made about $83,730 before taxes in 2024.
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Why Buyers Get Trapped
The trouble starts with the monthly payment, since buyers shop by it instead of the full price. A smaller payment feels easy, so people stretch the loan to six or seven years to shrink it.
That stretch is where the damage hides. The longer you borrow, the more interest piles up, and new car rates already run near 8%.
"People don't buy cars based on total cost anymore. They buy based on monthly payment, which is exactly how they end up in 72- or 84-month loans on a highly depreciating asset," said Mark Stancato, a planner at VIP Wealth Advisors.
He calls cars "one of the biggest wealth killers in the middle-class budget."
Picture a long car loan like a gym membership you can't quit. The cost looks small each month, but you're stuck for years while the car loses value.
That lost value hits investors too. Every dollar sunk into a fading asset is a dollar that could be building wealth somewhere else.
What To Watch
The fix isn't to toss the rule out. It's to bend it.
Judge says 12% to 15% of your pay on car costs beats stretching a loan to 84 months. Stancato adds a second tip: buy a used car that's three to five years old.
Why that age? The steepest drop in value has already happened by then.
The 10% target sits out of reach for most buyers now. The risk it was built to stop, though, is bigger than ever.
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