New vs. Used: Which Is the Smarter Buy in 2026?

12 min read Updated March 2026 South Florida Market

The "buy used and save money" advice that worked for decades isn't as clear-cut anymore. New car incentives have come back, interest rates on used cars are higher, and the used market in South Florida has its own unique dynamics. Let's break down the real math.

The Depreciation Equation

Every car buying guide starts with depreciation, and for good reason: it's the single biggest cost of vehicle ownership. A new car loses approximately 20-25% of its value in the first year and around 40-50% over three years.

Here's what that looks like in dollar terms for popular South Florida vehicles:

VehicleNew MSRPValue After 1 YearValue After 3 Years3-Year Loss
Toyota Camry LE$28,855$23,650$17,300$11,555
Honda CR-V LX$32,450$27,200$20,800$11,650
Ford F-150 XLT$42,970$35,800$27,500$15,470
Tesla Model Y$44,990$36,000$28,500$16,490

Buying a 2-3 year old version of the same car means someone else absorbed that initial depreciation hit. On a $43,000 F-150, that's roughly $15,000 someone else paid just by driving it off the lot.

South Florida Advantage: Used cars in Florida tend to hold value slightly better than the national average. No road salt means less rust, and the large market means strong demand for used vehicles year-round.

Interest Rates: The Hidden Cost Shift

Here's where the math gets interesting in 2026. As of March 2026, average auto loan rates look like this:

Credit ScoreNew Car RateUsed Car RateRate Difference
750+ (Excellent)5.2%6.8%1.6%
700-749 (Good)6.4%8.1%1.7%
650-699 (Fair)8.8%11.2%2.4%
Below 65012.5%16.8%4.3%

On a $25,000 used car financed over 60 months at 8.1%, you'll pay about $5,400 in interest. The same $25,000 on a new car at 6.4% costs you $4,200 in interest — a $1,200 difference. But you also have to factor in that the new car costs more upfront.

Many manufacturers also offer promotional financing on new vehicles — sometimes as low as 0.9% to 2.9% APR for qualified buyers. Used cars never get these deals. If you qualify for 1.9% APR on a new Camry, the total interest on a $28,000 loan over 60 months is just $1,380 versus $5,400+ on a used car at typical rates.

Warranty: Peace of Mind vs. Risk

New cars come with full manufacturer warranties — typically 3 years/36,000 miles bumper-to-bumper and 5 years/60,000 miles powertrain. In South Florida's heat, this matters more than in cooler climates. AC compressors, cooling systems, and electronics take extra punishment.

New Car Warranty Coverage

Used Car Options

A 2-3 year old used car might still have some original warranty remaining. Additionally, Certified Pre-Owned (CPO) programs extend coverage:

Pro Tip: If you're buying used, CPO is almost always worth the premium ($1,000-$2,500 more than non-CPO). You get warranty coverage, a multi-point inspection, and often better financing rates.

Total Cost of Ownership: 5-Year Comparison

Let's run the full numbers on a Toyota Camry, one of South Florida's most popular sedans:

Cost Category2025 Camry (New)2022 Camry (Used)
Purchase Price$28,855$22,800
Sales Tax (7% FL)$2,020$1,596
Interest (60 mo)$1,800 (at 2.9%)$5,100 (at 7.5%)
Depreciation (5 years)$14,400$7,800
Insurance (annual avg)$2,100/yr = $10,500$1,850/yr = $9,250
Maintenance$2,500 (mostly free for 2 yr)$4,200
Repairs~$0 (warranty)$1,500
5-Year Total Cost$60,075$52,246
Savings$7,829

The used Camry saves roughly $7,800 over 5 years — about $130/month. But you're driving a car that's 3 years older, has 38,000 miles on it, and won't have the latest safety tech. Whether that tradeoff is worth it depends on your priorities.

Florida-Specific Factors

No Road Salt = Better Used Cars

In northern states, used cars can have serious rust issues from road salt. Florida doesn't salt roads, so used vehicles here tend to be in better structural condition. This makes buying used in South Florida lower risk than in many other markets.

Hurricane and Flood Risk

Warning: After every hurricane season, flood-damaged vehicles enter the South Florida used car market. Some get "washed" titles from other states to hide the damage. Always run a vehicle history report (Carfax/AutoCheck) and look for signs of water damage: musty smells, water lines under the dashboard, corroded electrical connectors, and mismatched carpet.

Sun Damage

Florida sun destroys paint, leather, and dashboards over time. On used vehicles, check for:

These are cosmetic but can cost $500-$3,000+ to fix and should factor into your negotiation.

Insurance Costs

Florida has some of the highest auto insurance rates in the country — averaging $2,500-$3,200/year for full coverage. New cars cost more to insure because of higher replacement value, but the difference is usually only $200-$400/year.

When to Buy New

Buy new if:

When to Buy Used

Buy used if:

The CPO Sweet Spot

If you're on the fence, Certified Pre-Owned gives you the best of both worlds: 1-3 year old vehicles with remaining factory warranty, extended coverage, thorough inspections, and prices that are 15-25% below new. In South Florida, CPO inventory is usually strong because of the high volume of lease returns.

Bottom Line: For most South Florida buyers, a 2-3 year old CPO vehicle is the smartest financial move. You dodge the steepest depreciation, get warranty protection, and save $5,000-$10,000 versus new. But if you can snag a 0-2% APR deal on a new car, the math shifts in favor of buying new — especially if you plan to keep it long-term.

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