17-Year-Old Makes $1,700 Monthly, Buys $8,000 Honda From Friend—Now Owes $1,100 Every Month

MarketDash Editorial Team
13 days ago
A Georgia teenager learned a painful lesson about the hidden costs of car ownership after buying a 2012 Honda Accord from a friend. Between insurance, taxes, and repairs, what seemed like a manageable $400 monthly payment ballooned into a financial nightmare.

Here's a cautionary tale about why researching insurance before buying your first car might save you from financial disaster. Beto, a 17-year-old from Atlanta, recently called into "The Ramsey Show" to explain how his first vehicle purchase went sideways in spectacular fashion.

The setup seemed reasonable enough. Beto works full-time at a mixed martial arts gym, pulling in about $850 every two weeks—$1,700 monthly. He bought a 2012 Honda Accord from a friend for $8,000, agreeing to pay $400 per month. Classic starter car, friend deal, manageable payment. What could go wrong?

When Insurance Costs More Than Your Car Payment

"The part that's getting me is the insurance," Beto told hosts Rachel Cruze and Jade Warshaw. "My insurance for just liability a month because of my age is about $700."

That's not a typo. Seven hundred dollars monthly for basic liability coverage. Being a teenage driver with a newly purchased vehicle will do that to you. Suddenly his $400 car payment looks like the easy part.

But wait, there's more. Beto had to pay a one-time $700 title tax when transferring ownership into his mother's name. He also needs to shell out roughly $350 for repairs before the car can be properly tagged and legal to drive.

Add it all up, and Beto's looking at $1,100 per month in car-related expenses against his $1,700 income. That leaves $600 for everything else—food, gas, any kind of social life, and the general cost of existing as a human being.

"The finances that came with the car kind of are kicking me in the ass," he admitted with admirable honesty.

No Easy Way Out

Cruze and Warshaw sympathized but offered no magic solution. They asked if he could back out of the deal, but since the title transfer already went through, Beto's committed. The car is his problem now.

Cruze did try to find the silver lining in this expensive lesson. "I'm kind of glad you're getting a taste of it at $8,000 for a stupid car loan versus a $40,000 business loan that you're probably going to want to do when you're 25," she told him.

Fair point. Better to learn about the true cost of financing now with relatively small stakes than later when the zeros multiply.

A Path Forward

The good news? Beto's starting a new job at an orthopedic clinic in two weeks that pays $20 an hour for 40 hours weekly. That's $3,200 monthly before taxes—nearly double his current income. The bad news? The schedule conflicts with his training at the gym, which he values.

Warshaw suggested picking up gig work like DoorDash (DASH) or Instacart (CART) to bridge the gap. "And then, you just work out at the place you like working out at," she said.

Entrepreneurial Ambitions

Despite his current financial bind, Beto's already thinking ahead. He asked for advice about starting a car detailing business and mentioned having $1,000 in savings.

Cruze recommended doing serious homework first—researching equipment costs, potential earnings, and startup capital requirements. "You may find out, 'Oh my gosh, this is pretty incredible. I only have to put $500 in and I'm making thousands a month,'" she explained. Or he might discover it would require thousands upfront, which changes the calculation entirely.

She praised his work ethic despite the mess he's in. "You're a smart, hardworking guy and I think you're going to do fantastic," Cruze said.

The core lesson? Avoid debt whenever possible. "Debt will always set you up in the negative—financially, emotionally, your stress, everything," Cruze emphasized.

For Beto, that lesson came with a $1,100 monthly price tag. But at 17, he's got time to recover and apply what he's learned. Most people don't get their wake-up call until much later, when the stakes are considerably higher.

17-Year-Old Makes $1,700 Monthly, Buys $8,000 Honda From Friend—Now Owes $1,100 Every Month

MarketDash Editorial Team
13 days ago
A Georgia teenager learned a painful lesson about the hidden costs of car ownership after buying a 2012 Honda Accord from a friend. Between insurance, taxes, and repairs, what seemed like a manageable $400 monthly payment ballooned into a financial nightmare.

Here's a cautionary tale about why researching insurance before buying your first car might save you from financial disaster. Beto, a 17-year-old from Atlanta, recently called into "The Ramsey Show" to explain how his first vehicle purchase went sideways in spectacular fashion.

The setup seemed reasonable enough. Beto works full-time at a mixed martial arts gym, pulling in about $850 every two weeks—$1,700 monthly. He bought a 2012 Honda Accord from a friend for $8,000, agreeing to pay $400 per month. Classic starter car, friend deal, manageable payment. What could go wrong?

When Insurance Costs More Than Your Car Payment

"The part that's getting me is the insurance," Beto told hosts Rachel Cruze and Jade Warshaw. "My insurance for just liability a month because of my age is about $700."

That's not a typo. Seven hundred dollars monthly for basic liability coverage. Being a teenage driver with a newly purchased vehicle will do that to you. Suddenly his $400 car payment looks like the easy part.

But wait, there's more. Beto had to pay a one-time $700 title tax when transferring ownership into his mother's name. He also needs to shell out roughly $350 for repairs before the car can be properly tagged and legal to drive.

Add it all up, and Beto's looking at $1,100 per month in car-related expenses against his $1,700 income. That leaves $600 for everything else—food, gas, any kind of social life, and the general cost of existing as a human being.

"The finances that came with the car kind of are kicking me in the ass," he admitted with admirable honesty.

No Easy Way Out

Cruze and Warshaw sympathized but offered no magic solution. They asked if he could back out of the deal, but since the title transfer already went through, Beto's committed. The car is his problem now.

Cruze did try to find the silver lining in this expensive lesson. "I'm kind of glad you're getting a taste of it at $8,000 for a stupid car loan versus a $40,000 business loan that you're probably going to want to do when you're 25," she told him.

Fair point. Better to learn about the true cost of financing now with relatively small stakes than later when the zeros multiply.

A Path Forward

The good news? Beto's starting a new job at an orthopedic clinic in two weeks that pays $20 an hour for 40 hours weekly. That's $3,200 monthly before taxes—nearly double his current income. The bad news? The schedule conflicts with his training at the gym, which he values.

Warshaw suggested picking up gig work like DoorDash (DASH) or Instacart (CART) to bridge the gap. "And then, you just work out at the place you like working out at," she said.

Entrepreneurial Ambitions

Despite his current financial bind, Beto's already thinking ahead. He asked for advice about starting a car detailing business and mentioned having $1,000 in savings.

Cruze recommended doing serious homework first—researching equipment costs, potential earnings, and startup capital requirements. "You may find out, 'Oh my gosh, this is pretty incredible. I only have to put $500 in and I'm making thousands a month,'" she explained. Or he might discover it would require thousands upfront, which changes the calculation entirely.

She praised his work ethic despite the mess he's in. "You're a smart, hardworking guy and I think you're going to do fantastic," Cruze said.

The core lesson? Avoid debt whenever possible. "Debt will always set you up in the negative—financially, emotionally, your stress, everything," Cruze emphasized.

For Beto, that lesson came with a $1,100 monthly price tag. But at 17, he's got time to recover and apply what he's learned. Most people don't get their wake-up call until much later, when the stakes are considerably higher.