2013 CX-5 2.0L, thinking about upgrade to 2014 CX-5 2.5L

Thanks, and now we know the whole story, not that his anything to do with trading a 2.0L CX-5 for a 2.5L CX-5.

Never said I traded a CX-5 for a CX-5. I just used my example to show that a cx5 shouldn't lose $6k in less than a year when the vehicle I just traded lost only $11k in 5 years.
 
Never said I traded a CX-5 for a CX-5. I just used my example to show that a cx5 shouldn't lose $6k in less than a year when the vehicle I just traded lost only $11k in 5 years.

Yes, you never said originally what you traded, until we asked. And now we know. If somebody has a diesel Dodge to trade, it certainly holds it's value well. Also 1st year depreciation for any vehicle (even a diesel Dodge) is largest portion of the accumulated 5 year depreciation.

Thanks for providing some good information.
 
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Depreciation is tricky, because as a buyer, you factor in taxes and everything else, sellers are different.

For example, the GT in Canada, with remote start and the tech package with Taxes is roughly $38-42k depending on your province. I priced mine out at $42k with taxes in Saskatchewan and that included the HomeNet, remote start, plastic protection package and the tech upgrade, plus 10% tax (5% GST and 5% PST).

GS with Nav and Remote Start is roughly $35-37k with taxes, depending on province, but my quote came to $38k with Nav/Plastic/Homenet and Remote Start.

Good luck selling that a year later for anything more than $28k for the GT or $25k for the GS. That is a $10-14k hit and roughly 30% depreciation in the first year, probably more and the main reason I am trying to hold off buying one, even though I would keep it for 8-10 years and it wouldn't matter much.

I want one, but if I can get a GS next year with less than 30k km on it for $22-25k, I would do it. That would save me about $12-15k.

I saw a "used" one sell here the other day. Grey GS with 1000km on it that sold for $28500 plus tax. Same one at the Mazda dealer with 17km was $32000 plus tax. Now, how did O'Brians have it for 1000km and not be at a Dealership, I don't know...but that is a significant savings amount.

I don't mind buying used personally, but you are always going to get "screwed" if you sell your car immediately after buying it new IMO.

Another example is a 2011 Tucson with 40k on it. They bought it 2 years ago for $42k with tax and no navigation and are trying to sell it today for $27000 "asking", which means it will sell for $25k if they are lucky. (No tax needed as it was used).

I also looked at a 2012 Mitsubishi RVR SE with 27k on it. Dealership price was $24k (plus GST and PST as it was an out of province inport). You could of picked it up for $25k taxes in, but that is about $12k savings from brand new in 1 year.
 
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Good points. I agree that first year depreciation can be pretty severe. Unfortunately, I have found it very difficult to find the perfect 1 year old car with a 20-30% discount. Also when something is that new, I begin to get concerened that something is wrong with it unless it is a program/lease car or something.

I purchased my Escape (in sig) used w/ 10k miles in October 2006 at a pretty steep discount. It took a lot of searching, but I found a dealership that had received a large shipment of low-mileage program cars. At the time Escapes were notorius for high depreciation so buying used made a lot of sense.
 
That is pretty bad. I just traded a 5 year old truck with 60k miles that I paid $31k for (new) and got $20k on trade. I hope these CX-5s hold their value better than that.

$20K for a Dodge Ram diesel is pretty good after 5 years considering is cost roughly $46K brand new. It's still a Dodge though...lol

Most every car looses 20% in year one. Slow drop off after that.
 
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They have 4 Used cx-5 with anywhere from 15-19 k on them in Halifax Nova Scotia, and they are the base model with awd and convenience pkg and they are only 2k less than new sticker price.....so looks like they are holding there value pretty good.
 
Yes, and asking price in the small Nova scotia market has little to do with actual selling price/final transaction price in most parts of North America for used CX-5's.
 
Kind of a bad move -- I've been there twice selling new car after a year--not worth it in my opinion especially for 29hp. Why not keep your 2013 and turbo it a few years :) or just drive it the way it is OR actually upgrade to a vehicle with actual HP like a Forester XT, Kia Sportage SX Ford Escape Turbo etc. --- Kind of wish I got the Forester Now so much faster---but mpg suffers and interior is boring ....
 
Kind of a bad move -- I've been there twice selling new car after a year--not worth it in my opinion especially for 29hp. Why not keep your 2013 and turbo it a few years :) or just drive it the way it is OR actually upgrade to a vehicle with actual HP like a Forester XT, Kia Sportage SX Ford Escape Turbo etc. --- Kind of wish I got the Forester Now so much faster---but mpg suffers and interior is boring ....

I agree, not a wise move at all. It was more out of curiosity, I had a $ number in my head, and was curious what others thought it was worth.

However only 1 person out of over 2 dozen replies was brave enough to throw a number out there. :)
 
Well---we bought a 2013 GT in Canada with a few extras extended warranty out the door it 39,000 including taxes and all. We are currently at 9500kms and based on my past experiences and research I would say we probably could get around 29,000$. My last car that I took a big hit on after owning for a year was a 2006 WRX cost us 37,000 tax in etc. Sold a year later for 28,500 with 15,000kms but a WRX holds it's value better in my opinion.
 
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