BTW, I leased the vehicle for a three year low Mileage (10,000 miles/year) lease as single pay lease paying all costs at lease signing. Details at attachment. Hope attachment does not violate any forum rules. Attachment 9557
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BTW, I leased the vehicle for a three year low Mileage (10,000 miles/year) lease as single pay lease paying all costs at lease signing. Details at attachment. Hope attachment does not violate any forum rules. Attachment 9557
I've never seen one of these before. Looks like a direct knockoff. lol toyota must have a pretty aerodynamic shape figured out, as ive noticed a trend.
60+ mpg with a/c on is real great.
Enjoy the new ride congrats
Did you finance the mirage and if so how much did you have left that you owed i owe like 10000 and wanna trade my mirage in in about 9 months i need a big ol suv and wanna see if i can get a good deal on a new car
Ok, that's what I thought. Judging by your posts it seems you are sensitive to this. I know the topic has raised concerns for a few forum members here, and it can be a difficult situation to navigate.
I'm curious - do you currently own a Mirage? I understand you once owned two, but if I am correct you have sold them both.
If so, sorry they didn't work out for you. I understand the Mirage isn't for everyone. As I said before, you benefit from having the experience of owning and driving one.
:)
The Mirage is definatley not a good car to buy new and then keep for only 1 or 2 years. It depreciates at such a fast rate that in those 2 years of ownership you will really "take it on the chin" like a 40%-50% price depreciation.
And especially the manual transmission version like the one I bought. I read only 3% of cars sold in 2017 where manual transmission! So demand is as low for the Mirage in stick shift about as popular as buying a VCR today
On my 2015 I downgraded the car insurance to bare-bones coverage at $50 per month even though it is still being financed (They are not aware that I downgraded my insurance from the full coverage)