Young People Are Missing Auto Loan Payments At Near Record Numbers

The last time numbers were higher than they are right now was the end of the Great Recession in 2009.

We may earn a commission from links on this page.
In this Tuesday, June 13, 2017, photo, vehicle shopper Mary Jean Jones takes a test drive in a Prius C Hybrid with Mark Miller Toyota salesman Doug Lund in Salt Lake City.
Photo: Rick Bowmer (AP)

A new report from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York shows that young Americans are late on paying their car loans at near record levels. In fact, loan delinquencies are at their highest rate since the Great Recession. Apparently, 4.6 percent of borrowers under 30 years old transitioned into serious auto loan delinquency — meaning they were over 90 days overdue on a payment in the first quarter of 2023.

That makes for the highest percentage of seriously delinquent payments since the end of the Great Recession all the way back in 2009… when I was in sixth grade. Back then, it was 4.7 percent, so we’re pretty close.

Advertisement

Don’t worry, though. Us young folks aren’t alone in this. The report says that across all ages, 2.3 percent of all auto loans were at least 90 days late. Auto loans overall are also down. The number of new auto loans and leases reportedly totalled $162 billion in the last quarter, and that’s down from last year.

According to Yahoo Finance, the reason Americans under 30 face a higher delinquency rate is because they are “more vulnerable” to the “ongoing macroeconomic trends.” Basically, the economy can fuck young people every which way, and there’s not much they can do about it. I know this first hand.

Advertisement

The article says that because young Americans have comparatively less savings than older people, they aren’t as prepared to absorb the additional costs that come with higher interest rates. Americans are reportedly paying between $50 and $60 per month more than a year ago because of interest rates. What this pretty much comes down to is the idea that young Americans are paying signing loan agreements that are way more than they can actually afford.

“The payments are absolute budget busters. The average car payment for new car buyers was $800 last year, [and] about one in seven buyers has a payment of at least $1,000 a month,” Greg McBride, chief analyst at Bankrate.com, told Yahoo Finance. “There’s no wiggle room there.”

Advertisement

On top of the increasing prices, more and more dealers are apparently pushing customers to finance their vehicles for 36 or 48 months. The shorter options end up being less affordable for folks with unpredictable financial situations.

Don’t worry though, because things are going to get better. Just fuckin’ kidding. They’re about to get even worse. Student loan payments are about to get reinstated, and you know who pays most of those? That’s right, young people. A third of Americans between 25 and 34 have student loan debt, according to the article.

Advertisement

This is about to get even uglier.