Is driving a used 2009 Mercedes-Benz better than buying a new 2025 Honda Civic? According to Melissa (@baklavaamami), it is the better choice, and she says so on her TikTok video clip.
Melissa says, "Buying a brand new 2025 Honda Civic is the worst financial decision you can make. I drive an older 2009 Mercedes-Benz and am happier than if I had a brand new car."
Her decision is not just about the car she drives, but about the financial responsibility and freedom it represents. It's a reminder that every purchase, especially a significant one like a car, should be a well-informed financial decision.
Before we hear more from Melissa, imagine turning 30; you are supposed to be well on your way to success. You should be driving a new car, buying a new condo, having nice clothes, and having the lifestyle you see other people your age.
However, you don't think like most people your age.
You drive a fifteen-year-old car, not a new Honda Civic, and your philosophy is not about image; it's about being smart with your money. By driving a used Mercedes, you don't have a $ 500-a-month car payment like many of your friends.
People criticize you for driving an older car and not a new one. But you have your goals, and nothing will get you sidetracked.
You have learned that the grass isn't always greener on the other side. It may look like others are happier and have a better family, relationships, cars, and houses, but comparing yourself to others is a fast way to get off track and derail your life.
Social Media Can Be Deceptive
You have learned that by looking at social media, it's all about image, and it doesn't mean they are happy. You don't see that they are stressed out.
Because when you look closer, they are in debt. They have a lot of credit card debt and a huge car payment.
Melissa says,
"Here are the facts. Everyone I know with these new cars and their car payments is swimming in credit card debt every month."
"Buying a brand new car is the worst financial decision you can make."
Doesn't a used Mercedes cost a lot in maintenance and repairs?
She says no, "So far, so good, everyone! And yes, I would rather drive an older paid-off car than have a $500 plus monthly payment that I don't even own after five years. I'm so happy with my car."
No Repair Bills So Far
Melissa says she hasn't had any expensive repair bills on her Mercedes. "So far, so good, 1.5 years strong! It's been ok so far!! Maybe I just got lucky."
What Are Others Saying?
"For the record. Since 95% of people in the comments are haters. I have nothing against Hondas but love my car, my fifteen-year-old Mercedes, and being debt-free. So love y'all."
Not All Comments are Negative
Miss.irenaa says, "The older Benz is better than the newest ones. It's why I'm holding onto my 2014 still with absolutely no issues versus getting a new one."
Melissa could go into debt and look successful, but she knows it's not a good choice because she has done her homework.
"Of course, I can't afford a new one; that's why I bought a used car," she says confidently.
"The 2025 Honda Civics are very nice; I know people who have them. This is just my preference."
Of course, buying an older used vehicle can feel like a gamble, but so can buying a new or nearly-new luxury car. Unexpected mechanical failures aren’t exclusive to aging models. In fact, some drivers who spend upwards of $60,000 on newer premium vehicles encounter unusual issues far sooner than expected. Take, for example, the story of a 2019 BMW X5 owner whose engine suddenly failed at just 42,000 miles - an experience that led to a drawn-out warranty battle that went from bad to worse. If you think newer always means safer or more reliable, this account might change your mind.
Aren't newer cars safer?
Advertising "If you know anything about a Benz, it is one of the safest car brands. More people have died in a Honda Civic than have died in a Benz after a serious accident."
I wrote another story about Michael Rusli, who drives a ten-year-old Honda CR-V instead of buying a new car.
Michael says, "My car is ten years old, I'm making six figures, and I refuse to pay for something I don't need. I had an older Honda CR-V, sold it for a profit, and got a ten-year-old CR-V with that money; if it ain't broke, don't fix it."
Michael is a financial wealth management advisor who is wiser than his years. He's a Millennial who "practices what he preaches." He lives a no-car-payment life and keeps his paid-off Honda CR-V as long as possible.
He proudly states, "I'm driving a paid-off ten-year-old car because it costs nothing to run, and who wants a $500 per month car payment?"
Michael's financial freedom and control over his expenses are things he wouldn't trade for the world. This sense of empowerment is a key benefit of driving a paid-off car.
Most people want to drive a new car with the latest features and new technology, but it comes at a steep price. You have a large car payment, higher maintenance costs, license plates, taxes, and insurance. Here is why Michael's statement makes sense.
How Much Is the Average Car Payment?
Michael and Melissa ask why they should have a $500 car payment. According to a report from Bankrate, as of February 2025, the average monthly car payment for a new car is $737, and the average for a used car is $520.
Key Points to Consider:
Buying a used car generally results in lower upfront costs, and you don't have a large monthly payment like you would for a new car. However, used cars may have higher maintenance costs, while new cars offer newer technology and safety features.
Used Car Advantages:
- Slower Depreciation: Used cars depreciate at a slower rate than new cars.
- Lower Insurance Costs: Most used cars will have lower insurance premiums.
Used Car Disadvantages:
- Higher Maintenance Costs: Used cars may require more frequent and costly repairs.
- Potential for Unexpected Issues: Used cars may have hidden mechanical problems that require costly repairs.
- Limited Warranty: Used cars may not come with the same warranty protection as new cars.
New Car Advantages:
- New Technology and Features: New cars often have the latest safety features and technology.
- Warranty: New vehicles come with a warranty to protect against unexpected repairs. However, used car warranties are available.
New Car Disadvantages:
- Higher Initial Costs: New cars are more expensive to purchase than used cars.
- Higher Monthly Payments: New car loans result in high monthly payments.
- Rapid Depreciation: New cars depreciate rapidly, losing a significant portion of their value within the first year.
Reddit user herrniemand gives this good advice.
"If you don't have a car payment, think of what you can do with all that extra monthly money! It's basically like getting a raise! It might even be tempting to start new car shopping, to take advantage of high used car prices, and trade in your car while it's still worth something. You can get into something nice for the same or even lower payment than before."
"Don't do it," he says.
"Instead, use this as a perfect opportunity to save money since most of us don't save enough. After all, you've been managing without that extra monthly money for the past few years (if you haven't, then obviously use it to pay off any other debts first), so it should be relatively painless to stash it away rather than spend it. If you can set up an automatic paycheck deduction so you never even see it, that would be even better."
He finishes by saying, "It's almost always better to keep driving a paid-off car for as long as it's in decent shape, and don't underestimate the luxury of savings vs. debt."
Conclusion:
Think of a car as transportation, not a status symbol. Melissa and Michael are not concerned about image. They look at what they drive through a different lens than many new car buyers. If you live without a car payment and don't have that debt, you'll be able to live better now and have much less stress.
Melissa concludes, "I love to travel, and with no car payment, I can buy a plane ticket and go places I could never go if I had a $500 car payment. The experiences you have traveling will stay with you for the rest of your life, but you won't remember that expensive handbag you went into debt to buy."
It's Your Turn
Do you drive a paid-off car? If so, click the red Add New Comment link below and tell us about your experience.
Check out my 2025 Honda Civic story: I Just Bought a 2025 Honda Civic Sport With Only $1K Down, a Co-Signer and Have a $558 Payment, Because I Wanted a Brand New Car With CarPlay
I am Denis Flierl, a Senior Torque News Reporter since 2012. My 30+ year tenure in the automotive industry, initially in a consulting role with every major car brand and later as a freelance journalist test-driving new vehicles, has equipped me with a wealth of knowledge. I specialize in reporting the latest automotive news and providing expert analysis on Subaru, which you'll find here, ensuring that you, as a reader, are always well-informed and up-to-date. Follow me on my X SubaruReport, All Subaru, WRXSTI, @DenisFlierl, Facebook, and Instagram.
Photo credit: Denis Flierl via Melissa
Comments
Yeah sounds more like she's…
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In reply to You could also buy a 2009… by MrGallbladder (not verified)
Yeah sounds more like she's just trying to justify getting the used Mercedes because there's no way you can tell me she thinks she's being financially responsible by purchasing a 16-year-old German luxury car vs. a Civic of the same year. Heck, I wouldn't trust a Mercedes brand new and under warranty. No way in heaven I'd trust a 2009 Mercedes out of factory warranty.
First of all, vis-a-vis the…
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First of all, vis-a-vis the old Mercedes, I own an old Mercedes Sprinter. Apart from problems caused by Chrysler when they bought them to resell after modifying and rebadging, it has been pretty reliable. But I will tell you that Mercedes USA was no help rather recently when I needed a critical part. I had to ask a German board member to lean on them.
Buying used is great (I should do it myself). However, I would not buy a used luxury brand to save money.
I recently bought a new Outback Wilderness, specially modified to 11" ground clearance, which well suits bumping around the West. It's fast and able and affords 90 cf of cargo carrying w/ the Thule rooftop cargo carrier installed and the seats folded.
While I agree buy a brand…
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In reply to First of all, vis-a-vis the… by Witness (not verified)
While I agree buy a brand new car these days is a financial mistake, What you should have done is buy a used Honda/Acura or Toyota/Lexus. If you plan to keep that mercedes for a long period over 100k miles it will start to drain you bank account with repairs. Hondas and Toyotas have the longevity and reliability not matched by european luxury cars. Get out of it while you can!
As a retired Mercedes…
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As a retired Mercedes Salesperson (Also BMW & Audi)… All Germain cars are outrageously expensive to maintain! And when they break (and they will) expect to spend thousands of dollars, not hundreds!!
I purchased a 2007 in…
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I purchased a 2007 Corolla in October 2006 and I consider it one of the best financial decisions I've ever made. With over 200K miles on the clock it runs as perfectly as the day I drove it home from the dealership. With routine maintenance, I can't see anything stopping me from reaching 300K. With that being said, I wouldn't hesitate buying a used Toyota, knowing how reliable the brand is. The bottom line is that you have to thoroughly research the brand, model and year vehicle that you are potentially purchasing to get into a reliable car.
Buying used is smart. But i…
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In reply to I purchased a 2007 in… by Ed Budd (not verified)
Buying used is smart. But i buy cars only 2 or 3 yrs old still under warrenty. A 2005 used car is a crap shoot. I dont want those headaches. I bought a used luxury car and it was great. They depreciate the fastest so you can get axgreat deal.
Unfortunately this article…
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Unfortunately this article is poorly written. Let me give you my points. And average 15-year-old Mercedes let's say for this example +$ 15,000. So if the young lady is paying cash then she has the same amount to put down against any new car. Now if she's looking at that Honda which is not top of the line it's probably about $25,000 the $30,000 that means her payments are going to be only $300 a month I'm not 500 a month like she's stating in the article.
An average maintenance cost for Mercedes of her age is probably going to be the difference between 300 and 500 a month whether it's tires or breaks or she just wants to say she's lucky she still has to maintain the car. I would also say that her gas is going to cost her 500 a year more for the Mercedes at least than Honda.
What she also gives up in getting a 15 year old car is the potential for failure whether it's ABS brakes or airbags which are only guaranteed for 8 years federally.
The paint certainly will not pay as good and the interior will certainly not be as good looking.
You should also keep in mind when you get a new car almost all of them today come with things like emergency braking, Lane keep and all around cameras. So you're missing a lot of the safety equipment that makes driving much more pleasurable and probably adaptive cruise control.
She makes a good statement about more people dying in Hondas and in Mercedes probably that's true but that's also possibly because a lot more Hondas get sold than Mercedes.
The only area I can see where it makes sense is that the depreciation of course is less than a 15,000 car then one that's $30,000 but in 5 years they're going to be virtually worth an amount of money that will provide for a good trade in on another car.
I bought a 2012 Honda civic…
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I bought a 2012 Honda civic back in 2015 it was 3 years old at the time. Paid it off in 2020. Had it ever since and it has been running good. No new car payments for over 4 years and no costly repairs either.
I don't know where you got…
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I don't know where you got your statistics from Mellisa, but if more people have died in Hondas than Mercedes Benz that might have to do with the fact that Honda sell more than twice as many cars as Mercedes Benz. More than twice as many could result in more deaths, if that information was actually available. Also I don't know about 2009, but Honda scores a higher safety rating today than a Mercedes Benz, and God forbid you have any major repairs on a car like that.
I'm on my third pre-owned…
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In reply to I don't know where you got… by Matthew (not verified)
I'm on my third pre-owned Mercedes-Benz in a row. Maintenance does not cost $3 to $500 a month as I seen in some of these comments. You can buy OEM parts through this place called FCPEuro.com and it is the same manufacturers that make the parts for Mercedes they may grind off the Mercedes logo though. The engines and transmissions will run literally for hundreds and thousands of miles as long as it is properly maintained and you find one that has service records. When I bought my last one at a pretty big discount I put about $6,000 into parts basically rebuilding the entire front end and axles wheel bearings suspension parts and rear plus I did a lot of preventative maintenance work and replaced the coil packs wires and everything else you can think of that could possibly go wrong with the car and put in a new intake which wasn't expensive. The intake has a three flap system and at the dealer it was 23 or 2,800 a reman was about $1,600 and I found one on Amazon for $120 which is one of three parts from Amazon I have put on my car and it has lasted three and a half years already without any issues which I'm very surprised about. The only maintenance you really need to do is your oil changes when they are due and use mobile one synthetic oil.that should cost you about $70 if you do it yourself and use a premium mobile one oil filter. There are some places that even have package deals even cheaper for the oil change if you buy two 5 l jugs and the filter together. All the other parts aren't any more expensive than any other car on the road.
Im laughing my ass off about…
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Im laughing my ass off about this. That woman who said she preferred an old benz is hilarious. Also 2025 and ur paying $500/ for a civic that's because you probably have bad credit. My cousin got a 2025 honda civic and she's only paying only $325 a month and thats the one before type R. Also Honda's are reliable and cheap on maintenance, hows your maintenance doing on ur old benz? Dont tell me its all good. You can lie all you want but i fix cars for a living there's nothing good about an old benz lol! Good luck tho. You can pretend all you want. But that aint nowhere near a " financial smart choice".
If the 2009 MB is a C Class…
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In reply to Im laughing my ass off about… by Keith (not verified)
If the 2009 MB is a C Class and it's been well maintained it's not going to cost a fortune to keep on the road, particularly if it's the six cylinder model. We had two of these and annual costs were really just consumables (brakes, tyres, wipers etc) and regular service.. no major repair costs in about 10 vehicle years. Beautiful car to drive and so durable.
Yeah! Have a better idea…
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Yeah! Have a better idea. Buy a 15 yr old civic, or accord. Why the hell would you buy a 15 yr old merc and think that’s a good idea?? People who have buy these, trade them in when they have a maintenance problem and the estimate is $5k, turn around and say they can’t afford the bill which is why they don’t need to be driving a merc.
Out of all the older…
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Out of all the older vehicles she could have bought, she bought one which will cause her to go bankrupt. Why not an older Toyota? those things can last to 1million miles. But she bought something that requires you to drop nearly $200 on new wipers because nothing in the store fits. She bought Mercedes because she sees it as a status symbol. Nothing more.
Wait for it...
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Wait for it...
It's all good so long as…
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It's all good so long as something serious doesn't happen. No trade in value so presumably you're going to drive it until it does fall apart. That, and you can't put a price on reliability. She'll learn that lesson the hard way if she breaks down at the worst time.
I also think she's off with the "more people die in a civic" comments. The civic is one of the most common cars on the road, so it stands to reason based on that alone. To think that your 15 years old benz is as safe as a new civic, particularly a civic with all the safety features, is laughable.
That is wise decision…
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That is wise decision Mellissa. I would rather debt free and driving used car.
Funny, I just test drove a…
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Funny, I just test drove a new Civic hybrid hatch a couple days ago. Both of my cars have been paid off for a while, and I'll sell one of them on the private market to supplement the purchase of the Civic. However, the dealership added a $3K adjustment right off the bat and a $1,600 "accessories" line item. I inquired and was told it was a "lifetime" maintenance plan. I obviously said, "well, I'm not paying for either of those."
Ultimately, they wouldn't come down to the out the door price I wanted so I just left, no worries, but since then the sales manager called me and decided to try to lecture me about capitalism when I told him their $3K adjustment was basically BS. He was like, "well some people will just pay it." I said, "yeah, and that's why dealerships are ruining the reputations of car companies." Now, the sales DIRECTOR has emailed me saying they almost never lose a sale over the price. I'll call him back and see what he has to say, but I stand firm on my OTD price, which is perfectly fair. I'm a bit hamstrung because I'm married to the trim and color combo I want, but I am also advantaged because I don't NEED a car.
My wife and I have both, a…
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My wife and I have both, a paid off vehicle and a newer but used vehicle that unfortunately has a payment. If the vehicle with the payment didn't have a lifetime power train warranty then we wouldn't have bought it. We also wanted a good used vehicle that's reliable so we can travel.
She's going to wish she…
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She's going to wish she never bought that Mercedes. It will start having problems soon. She should have done what I do. Lease the Honda the first three years, pay under $300.00 a month. Then after three years go into financing the same car and keep the payments under $300.00 per month. I did it on my 2016 Civic and I just traded it in for a 2025 Civic Sport Touring Hybrid. Payments are $305 and in three years I can start financing or maybe even just turn it in and get another Leased vehicle.
Sorry, I'm not buying it…
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Sorry, I'm not buying it that she's money-smart. You're not being financially responsible when you buy a 16-year-old out-of-warranty Mercedes Benz. Like, you can't make this stuff up. LOL
Mercedes? Should have bought…
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Mercedes? Should have bought a used civic or Corolla. Unless your best friend is a Mercedes Mechanic, lol.
Ok...91 Octane Gas Only/…
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Ok...91 Octane Gas Only/ Ethanol Shield Fuel Additive/Full Syn Oil Changes 5,000 miles...Drive it really smooth...Just find a Certified Mechanic that knows how to repair these...Start Checking Internet on quality German Rated Parts for your ride.......
Good philosophy for a…
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Good philosophy for a youngster but skip the Benz and buy a used Honda.
Our family has 2007 and …
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Our family has 2007 and 2010 Camrys that we will drive until they are dust. Totally reliable and cheap to fix for the most part. The last one, a 2000, had 320000 miles, and sold it for 2k.
BTW, we also have a 2000 Land Cruiser as a back up.
I'm tempted to purchase a new Miata, but luckily I'm to tall and don't fit.
512000 km 2003 Honda Pilot …
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512000 km 2003 Honda Pilot
No payments
I drive a 2016 Ford F150…
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I drive a 2016 Ford F150 with a3.5 ecobost 6 cylinder engine. Good ride, great power for highway boat towing, 22-25 miles per gallon, 5 passengers, loads of cargo space, bought new $61,000.00.
Eight years and 181,000 klm, 4 tires brakes, ($2400) synthetic oil changes.
Just wait until maintenace…
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Just wait until maintenace and repair costs kick in, expecially on a German car, you'll soon find out thats no bargain...
I drive a 1988 Mercedes Benz…
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I drive a 1988 Mercedes Benz 560SL that I bought used in 1999 as a birthday present to myself and I still own it to this day. I still get compliments on it wherever I go. One of the best investments I made in my life.
Wait until you get your…
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Wait until you get your first $3000 repair bill...All old cars break and Mercedes are way expensive when they do. Hope you do ok
Pagination