While visiting my parents in Honolulu this past winter, I ended up driving my dad’s 28-year-old beater for eight days. He bought that Toyota Avalon new in 1997—back when I was a college sophomore and he was stationed in Guangzhou, China for the U.S. Foreign Service.

I’ve known this car nearly as long as he has, and for more than half my life, I’ve driven it during my visits home. Sure, it drives like a boat and shakes when I hit the brakes on the highway, but it reliably gets my family around the island.

Not Getting a New Car After 10 Years After All

I once planned for summer 2025 to be the year I’d finally upgrade my ride. I always believed the ideal time to replace your car is when it hits about 10 years old—long enough for safety and technology improvements to kick in, which is

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