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Wow, 19%. I hope you can really pay off in less than a year.
Asking for paystubs and/or w2 is not unusual as proof of income. Occassionally you may be asked for tax return from last year (CU's and banks will sometimes as for that).
Unless you go to my credit union... Who financed a 45k car a couple years ago for a 21 year old who put down 65k as income, which was true - but never requested a single piece of financial information - which I almost laughed at... I mean, really? 65k at 21? My situation included an inheritance and family stipend, but no verification.
OP, 19% is crazy high - if you decide to do it, make sure to pay it off ASAP!!
And people tell me I'm crazy with 5 bikes in my garage. Only one is financed and it is at 0.9% interest.
19% will kill you. Use some of the cash on hand to pay down the principal soon and then you will be paying 19% on a much lower balance. Your payments will stay the same but the money wasted on interest will be much less. You still get the benefit to your credit score.
Find an amortization table and look at the difference between paying $5,000 now verses the same $5,000 in extra payments over a year and you will find a big difference.
@Anonymous wrote:
The bike is already in my garage :] My garage is starting to get crampted, this is my 5th bike lol. I have the liquid capital to pay it off now if I wished. However i rather remain as liquid as I can, and build credit in the process. Credit is kind of a scam, in the way that you have to spend / throw away money to build credit. My end game is to get a good mortgage rate / terms. A means to an end.
@Not really. There are other ways to build credit besides $19K @ 19%. You chose to do this.
Learning all the details of a business transaction and then making an informed choice makes sense to me. If you are looking at having better info on your reports then having the bigger loan to start sounds logical. If you make a large principal reduction soon then the interest won't hurt so bad.
In a year or two, all that will show on your report is the original balance and that it is paid. It won't show interest rate, down payment, extra principal, etc.
Harley will approve ANYONE as long as you put 10% down...
I thought my 13.99% was bad. But i get it, I've been riding for several years now. And sometimes you can't put a price on the freedom you get on a motorcycle.