Some cars barely leave the driveway anymore. One owner works from home. Another keeps a second car for weekends. Someone else leaves town for a few weeks and comes back expecting the car to start like
Most people assume they would hear about a recall if their car was affected. A letter in the mail, maybe a call from the dealer, something official. That is a nice idea. It is also not something an
Most people look at the price on the window and think, okay, that’s the number. It isn’t. That number is just the part you agree to upfront. The real cost of owning a car is everything
Most people have a very specific relationship with dashboard lights. They notice one, feel mildly attacked by it, hope it is nothing, and then keep driving until the car forces the conversation. It
The average car on American roads is now almost 13 years old, which sounds surprising until you think about what a new car costs now. Then it sounds completely logical. A lot of people are h
A scratch on the car can ruin the mood weirdly fast. You walk out, see it, and your brain immediately jumps to the same place: great, now this is going to be expensive. But sometimes it is n
There is a certain kind of car expense that annoys people more than almost anything else. Not the repair itself, but paying just to be told what might be wrong. That is why a cheap OBD-II scanner has
Few things are more annoying than walking up to the car and spotting a scratch that definitely was not there before. It throws off the whole mood instantly. For about ten seconds, it feels like the da
Changing your own oil sounds like a bigger deal than it really is. Then one day you do it, realize it is pretty straightforward, and suddenly paying someone else to do it starts feeling a little annoy
Most mechanics will tell you the same thing if they are being honest: a lot of the expensive repairs they see every week never had to happen. Not because people do not care about their cars. Usua