The sticker price is just the beginning. Between depreciation, insurance, financing, maintenance, and fuel, a car’s true cost over 5-10 years can be double or triple the purchase price. This guide puts real numbers on every ownership cost for both new and used cars — so you can make the decision with math, not feelings.
The Headline Numbers
New vs 3-Year-Old Used: $35,000 Midsize Sedan
Cost Category
New Car (5 Years)
Used Car — 3 Years Old (5 Years)
Difference
Purchase price
$35,000
$21,000
+$14,000 used savings
Depreciation (5 years)
-$19,250 (55%)
-$8,400 (40%)
+$10,850 used savings
Financing cost (interest)
$5,600
$3,800
+$1,800 used savings
Insurance (5 years)
$9,500
$7,800
+$1,700 used savings
Maintenance & repairs
$3,500
$6,500
-$3,000 new savings
Fuel (60,000 mi)
$6,000
$7,200
-$1,200 new savings
Registration & taxes
$3,200
$2,100
+$1,100 used savings
Total 5-year cost
$62,800
$48,400
Used saves $14,400
Cost per mile (60K mi)
$1.05
$0.81
$0.24/mile cheaper
Buying a 3-year-old used car saves roughly $14,000-$15,000 over 5 years — and the biggest driver is depreciation, not the purchase price difference.
Depreciation: The Largest Hidden Cost
How New Cars Lose Value
Year
% of Original Value Lost
Cumulative Loss on $35,000 Car
Year 1
20-30%
$7,000-$10,500
Year 2
10-15%
$10,500-$15,750
Year 3
8-12%
$13,300-$19,950
Year 4
6-8%
$15,400-$22,750
Year 5
5-7%
$17,150-$25,200
Year 10
3-5%/year
$26,000-$31,000
A new $35,000 car is worth roughly $15,750 after 5 years and $4,000-$9,000 after 10 years.
Depreciation by Vehicle Type
Vehicle Type
5-Year Depreciation
Holds Value Best
Luxury sedans (BMW, Mercedes)
55-70%
No
Domestic sedans (Chevy, Ford)
50-65%
No
Midsize SUVs
40-55%
Moderate
Pickup trucks (Tacoma, F-150)
30-45%
Yes
Toyota/Honda (Camry, Civic)
35-50%
Yes
Jeep Wrangler
25-35%
Yes
Electric vehicles (2026)
40-55%
Declining, varies by model
Tesla Model 3/Y
35-50%
Better than most EVs
Key insight: If you’re buying new, choose a model that holds its value (trucks, Toyota, Honda). If you’re buying used, choose a model with high depreciation (luxury, domestic sedans) — you get more car for less money.
Full Cost Breakdown: New Car
Financing
Factor
Typical New Car
Cost
Loan amount
$35,000 (0% down)
—
Interest rate (2026)
6.5-8.0% (new)
—
Term
60 months
—
Total interest paid
—
$5,600-$7,400
Monthly payment
—
$675-$705
Down Payment
Loan Amount
Total Interest
Monthly Payment
$0 (0%)
$35,000
$5,950
$683
$3,500 (10%)
$31,500
$5,355
$615
$7,000 (20%)
$28,000
$4,760
$546
Insurance
Coverage
Annual Cost (New)
Why Higher for New
Comprehensive + collision
$1,200-$2,000
Higher replacement value
Liability
$500-$800
Same as used
Gap insurance (recommended)
$200-$400
New cars go underwater faster
Total annual
$1,900-$3,200
—
New car insurance costs 20-30% more than a comparable used car because the replacement value is higher.
Maintenance (Years 1-5)
Service
Frequency
Cost Per Visit
5-Year Total
Oil changes
Every 5K-7.5K miles
$50-$80
$500-$800
Tire rotation
Every 7.5K miles
$30-$50
$200-$400
Brake pads
Once (around 40-50K miles)
$250-$500
$250-$500
Tires (one set)
Around 40-50K miles
$600-$1,000
$600-$1,000
Cabin/engine air filter
Annually
$30-$60
$150-$300
Wiper blades
Annually
$25-$50
$125-$250
Factory warranty repairs
—
$0 (covered)
$0
5-year maintenance total
—
—
$1,825-$3,250
The factory warranty is the biggest advantage of buying new — zero repair costs for 3-5 years (bumper-to-bumper) and 5-10 years (powertrain).
Full Cost Breakdown: 3-Year-Old Used Car
Financing
Factor
Typical Used Car
Cost
Loan amount
$21,000
—
Interest rate (2026)
8.0-10.0% (used)
—
Term
48-60 months
—
Total interest paid
—
$3,800-$5,600
Monthly payment
—
$430-$555
Used car rates are 1.5-2.5% higher than new — but you’re borrowing less, so the total interest is still lower.
Insurance
Coverage
Annual Cost (Used)
Why Lower
Comprehensive + collision
$800-$1,500
Lower replacement value
Liability
$500-$800
Same as new
Gap insurance
Not needed (usually)
Less likely to be underwater
Total annual
$1,300-$2,300
—
Maintenance (Years 4-8 of Vehicle Life)
Service
Frequency
Cost Per Visit
5-Year Total
Oil changes
Every 5K-7.5K miles
$50-$80
$500-$800
Tire rotation
Every 7.5K miles
$30-$50
$200-$400
Brake pads + rotors
1-2 times
$400-$800
$400-$1,600
Tires (1-2 sets)
Every 40-50K miles
$600-$1,000
$1,200-$2,000
Battery replacement
Once
$150-$300
$150-$300
Suspension components
As needed
$300-$800
$300-$800
Transmission service
Once at ~60K miles
$150-$300
$150-$300
Spark plugs
Once
$100-$300
$100-$300
Unexpected repairs (no warranty)
Varies
$500-$2,000+
$1,000-$4,000
5-year maintenance total
—
—
$4,000-$10,500
Used cars cost $2,000-$7,000+ more in maintenance over 5 years due to warranty expiration and age-related repairs.
Side-by-Side: 5-Year and 10-Year Comparison
5-Year Total Cost of Ownership
Category
Buy New ($35K)
Buy Used — 3yr Old ($21K)
Used Savings
Depreciation
$19,250
$8,400
$10,850
Financing
$5,600
$3,800
$1,800
Insurance
$9,500
$7,800
$1,700
Maintenance & repairs
$3,500
$6,500
-$3,000
Fuel
$6,000
$7,200
-$1,200
Registration & fees
$3,200
$2,100
$1,100
Total
$47,050
$35,800
$11,250
10-Year Total Cost of Ownership
Category
Buy New, Keep 10 Years
Buy Used 3yr Old, Keep 10 Years
Used Savings
Depreciation
$27,000
$16,800
$10,200
Financing
$5,600
$3,800
$1,800
Insurance
$16,500
$14,000
$2,500
Maintenance & repairs
$12,000
$18,000
-$6,000
Fuel
$12,000
$14,400
-$2,400
Registration & fees
$5,000
$3,500
$1,500
Total
$78,100
$70,500
$7,600
Over 10 years, the gap narrows significantly. If you buy new and keep the car 10+ years, the per-year cost difference shrinks because maintenance eventually catches up on older used cars.
The Best Strategy for Each Situation
Your Situation
Best Option
Why
Tight budget
Used (3-5 years old)
Lowest total cost, lower payments
Want lowest 5-year cost
Used (2-3 years old, certified)
Biggest depreciation savings
Want to keep 10+ years
Either
Gap narrows with long ownership
Driving 25K+ miles/year
New (reliability + warranty)
Warranty covers high-mile repairs
Driving <10K miles/year
Used
Depreciation matters less; maintenance stays low
Need specific safety tech
New
Latest ADAS features only available new
Used prices within 15% of new
New
Minimal savings don’t justify used risks
0% financing available
New
Free money makes new car math compelling
Want lowest monthly payment
Used with larger down payment
Lower price + down payment = lowest payment
The Sweet Spot: Certified Pre-Owned (CPO)
Feature
CPO
Private Sale Used
New
Price
10-15% above private sale
Lowest
Highest
Warranty
Extended (1-2 years)
None
Full (3-5 years)
Inspection
Factory-certified
None guaranteed
N/A
Financing rates
Near-new rates
Higher
Lowest
Vehicle history
Clean title required
Buyer beware
N/A
Best for
Risk-averse used buyers
Budget maximizers
Warranty + tech seekers
CPO is the middle ground — you get used car pricing with some new car protections. The warranty extension alone can save $2,000-$5,000 in unexpected repairs.
Fuel Costs: New vs Used
Factor
New Car (2026)
3-Year-Old Used
Average MPG (midsize sedan)
32-35 city/highway
28-32 city/highway
Annual fuel cost (12K miles, $3.50/gal)
$1,200-$1,315
$1,315-$1,500
5-year fuel cost
$6,000-$6,575
$6,575-$7,500
Newer models are slightly more fuel-efficient, but the difference is modest: $200-$400/year for most gas-powered vehicles.
EV vs Gas Cost Comparison
Factor
New EV ($38,000)
New Gas ($35,000)
Used Gas 3yr ($21,000)
5-year fuel/electricity
$3,000-$4,000
$6,000
$7,200
5-year maintenance
$1,500-$2,500
$3,500
$6,500
Tax credit (if eligible)
-$7,500
$0
$0
5-year total cost
$42,000-$48,000
$47,050
$35,800
EVs save on fuel and maintenance but the purchase price premium offsets savings unless you qualify for the $7,500 federal tax credit and keep the vehicle 5+ years.
Common Mistakes
Mistake
Why It’s Costly
Buying new with a 72-84 month loan
You’ll be underwater for 3-4 years — owing more than the car is worth
Not shopping insurance before buying
Insurance on a new sports car can add $1,000+/year vs a midsize sedan
Ignoring total cost of ownership
A $25K used car with $4K/year maintenance costs more than a $32K new car with warranty
Buying used without a pre-purchase inspection
One missed issue can cost $2,000-$5,000
Skipping gap insurance on new (0% down)
If totaled in year 1-2, you’ll owe $5K-$10K more than insurance pays
Stretching budget for new “because warranty”
Warranty doesn’t cover depreciation — the biggest cost
Not accounting for opportunity cost
A $14K savings invested at 7% for 10 years = $27,500
WealthVieu researches and writes data-driven personal finance guides using primary sources including the IRS, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Federal Reserve, and Census Bureau.
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