I am a big proponent to never taking on any debt and paying for everything with only the cash you have on hand. Since it sounds like if you buy this van today for $18,000, you will not be doing a heck of a lot with the van prior to paying it off ($500 per month payment + the extra insurance cost for having it on a loan is a LOT of money), having a van that is not used it just throwing money down the drain (aka 'banks'). <br><br>There are two other options:<br>1) Save up that amount of money each month, and in 7-10 months (going by your time frame) you have a large lump sum to pay for your van in cash (significantly cheaper then to take on a loan). <br>2) Purchase an older van now (for cash) and take the 7-10 months to get it just as, if not more, reliable than a new van. You can have the van on hand now, without taking on a huge debt.<br><br>As I've said in previous forum posts; <strong>a new cars does NOT necessarily equate to a more-reliable car</strong>. Hundreds of thousands of 'new' cars are recalled every year... some for some very major defects. My Wife's 2002 trail blazer was a lemon spending the first 3 years back and forth to the dealership. Then it blew out it's transmission last month after only 150,000 miles ($4000 repair bill for a vehicle that is valued today at just over $4000). My Mothers Mini Cooper was traded in after only 50,000 miles because of constant and major engine problems (the dealership never could find a reason why TWO OF THE FOUR cylinders were misfiring for years). <br>In contrast, my <strong>1989</strong> Dodge van has cost me $3000 to buy, and less than $1000 in repairs (including tires and oil changes) in the past 3 years and 50,000 miles traveled. My daily driver is a <strong>1978</strong> Datsun 280z bought in 2002 and has cost me less then $1000 in repairs as well (11 years owned). Old cars are easy to work on yourself and cheap to find parts. Newer cars are not as easy to do your own work and parts are significantly more expensive.<br><br>Buying an "older" vehicle and spending the money saved into repairs of that older vehicle is significantly less expensive than buying a "newer" vehicle. But, if money is not a concern to you, the banks (the only folks benefiting from a new-car purchase) would love to have your $18,000 + interest.<br><br>