Jupeman
Active Member
- First Name
- Charlie
- Joined
- Aug 24, 2023
- Threads
- 5
- Messages
- 35
- Reaction score
- 24
- Location
- New Hampshire
- Vehicles
- '07 GT3, '09 Cayenne Turbo S, '14 Cayman, '16 GT3
- Thread starter
- #1
As posted elsewhere, I went to my dealer earlier this month intrigued by the idea of adding a Taycan to my stable. Test drives in a RWD and 4S had me believing these were not just great EVs, they were great cars. I think everyone here agrees that the dynamics are great.
In pondering what to do, I dug in more and found a 6k mile MY20 Turbo S at what seemed like a pretty low price vs. others advertised. This had me reading this forum, Rennlist, and whatever I can find to understand the market a little better. I turn now to this sage group for some extra guidance.
Two concerns with buying any Taycan today, new or used:
1) are they ticking maintenance time bombs, particularly out of warranty (Who here would confidently own this car out of warranty?)
2) Does the rapid, granted normal for a car of this type, depreciation simply not align to concerns around #1 and the evolution of EV tech and Porsche's sophistication with them? In other words, is there even a normal depreciation curve for these or does value go to very low/zero outside of warranty or battery warranty?
All this said, I made an offer on the MY20 Turbo S on Friday that was ~$5k lower than the dealer's offered deal (which was ~$900 better than their listed asking price). Dealer said "nah". Fast forward to Tuesday (today) and the dealer is now down ~$3.5k from their original offer (3.2%). But still above my offer. The fact I've done "not a lot" but respond to emails from the GM has me further doubting the market. This car has lost ~$85 per day in value each of the last three years. The deal as it stands now has one more year of factory warranty plus 3 years CPO (normal CPO and a +1 extra purchased). Effectively the car will be mine with 4 years, unlimited miles warranty.
My ultimate question is assuming one is happy to jump on the depreciation curve, which any current used buyer or new buyer has to be, where is the right place to grab it? Should a somewhat lightly spec'd MY20 Turbo S be under $100k? $110k? $120k?
In pondering what to do, I dug in more and found a 6k mile MY20 Turbo S at what seemed like a pretty low price vs. others advertised. This had me reading this forum, Rennlist, and whatever I can find to understand the market a little better. I turn now to this sage group for some extra guidance.
Two concerns with buying any Taycan today, new or used:
1) are they ticking maintenance time bombs, particularly out of warranty (Who here would confidently own this car out of warranty?)
2) Does the rapid, granted normal for a car of this type, depreciation simply not align to concerns around #1 and the evolution of EV tech and Porsche's sophistication with them? In other words, is there even a normal depreciation curve for these or does value go to very low/zero outside of warranty or battery warranty?
All this said, I made an offer on the MY20 Turbo S on Friday that was ~$5k lower than the dealer's offered deal (which was ~$900 better than their listed asking price). Dealer said "nah". Fast forward to Tuesday (today) and the dealer is now down ~$3.5k from their original offer (3.2%). But still above my offer. The fact I've done "not a lot" but respond to emails from the GM has me further doubting the market. This car has lost ~$85 per day in value each of the last three years. The deal as it stands now has one more year of factory warranty plus 3 years CPO (normal CPO and a +1 extra purchased). Effectively the car will be mine with 4 years, unlimited miles warranty.
My ultimate question is assuming one is happy to jump on the depreciation curve, which any current used buyer or new buyer has to be, where is the right place to grab it? Should a somewhat lightly spec'd MY20 Turbo S be under $100k? $110k? $120k?
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