Money Forged – Forging Wealth That Lasts by Jaxon Forge

Your Car is NOT an Investment – and that’s OK

Your Car is Not an Investment, and That’s Okay | Jaxon Forge – MoneyForged.com

Your Car is Not an Investment, and That’s Okay

Published March 2026

I used to tell myself the same lie most guys do: “This car will hold value. It’s a smart buy. It’s an asset.”

Then reality hit. I watched six-figure depreciation in under five years while my actual investments—boring rental properties, index funds, a couple of unglamorous businesses—quietly compounded. The car? It just sat there costing me insurance, gas, maintenance, and opportunity cost every single month.

Here’s the cold truth most people refuse to hear: **Your car is a liability, not an investment.** And accepting that fully is one of the fastest mental upgrades you can make on the road to real wealth.

The Math Doesn’t Lie

Drive a $60k vehicle off the lot? It’s worth $45–50k the second the tires hit pavement. Year one depreciation often eats 20–30%. By year five? You’re lucky to get 40–50% of original MSRP back—if it’s a reliable brand.

Meanwhile, that same $60k parked in a boring S&P 500 tracker at 8–10% average annual return? It grows. No oil changes required. No surprise repair bills. No monthly payments bleeding your cash flow.

I stopped trading cash flow for chrome around age 32. Traded the leased German status box for a paid-off, reliable Japanese sedan that cost me $18k cash. Insurance dropped 40%. Maintenance became predictable. And the difference? Straight into investments that actually pay me back.

Why We Lie to Ourselves About Cars

It’s ego dressed up as practicality. We tell ourselves:

  • “I need it for work/clients.”
  • “It’s an investment in my personal brand.”
  • “This one’s different—it holds value.”

I’ve been there. Drove the flashy car. Got the nods in valet lines. Felt like I’d “made it.” Then I ran the numbers and realized I’d paid six figures in depreciation + interest + upkeep to rent temporary social proof.

The silent killer? Comfort masquerading as “balance.” You convince yourself a nicer car = better life. But it usually just = less money working for you.

What Actually Moves the Needle

Want faster wealth? Obsess over assets that produce cash flow or appreciate with minimal input:

  • Real estate that pays rent every month
  • Index funds that compound decade after decade
  • Boring businesses that print recurring revenue
  • Skills that turn into multiple income streams

Your car? Treat it like a tool. Buy what gets you from A to B reliably, cheaply, and without drama. Pay cash if possible. Keep it until the wheels fall off. The less it costs to own, the more you keep to forge real money.

Exception? If you’re collecting rare classics as a true hobby and you can afford to lose money on them—fine. But don’t call it investing. Call it what it is: expensive entertainment.

Bottom line: Your car isn’t building your net worth—it’s quietly destroying it. Accept that, redirect the money, and watch how fast the boring path compounds into serious freedom.

If this hit home, drop a comment or share your own “car lie” story below. And if you’re ready to stop leaking money on liabilities and start forging real wealth, head to the Accredited Investor Checklist I wish I’d had at 30.

Grind in silence. Compound in public (eventually).
— Jaxon Forge

© 2026 Money Forged. All rights reserved. Stories and advice from Jaxon Forge.

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