Certain years of vehicle circulation constitute a real vein. A logic that deserves to be better known to buyers.
Buying a used car remains a delicate exercise, even for drivers who think they have mastered market codes. We observe prices rising and others falling for no apparent reason. This is the fog that Charlie Reid, director of Riverside Car Sales, is trying to dissipate. specialist in high-end used vehicles. He argues that a precise range of car use concentrates the best quality-price ratio. He says that everything comes down to a balance between loss of value and mechanical reliability: “Too new, and you’re paying for depreciation that hasn’t happened yet. Too old, and you’re betting on its reliability. But, find the right balance, and you get the best of both worlds.”
Charlie Reid describes a regular, almost mathematical phenomenon that buyers can take advantage of: new cars lose around 40 to 60% of their value at a specific time. After this initial slap, prices stop collapsing, allowing access to a modern model, still young, without incurring the costs linked to leaving the factory. Thus, we are less interested in getting the best deal of the century than in minimizing unpleasant surprises. In this context, safety technologies are already well in place, as are recent equipment, but without the bill that accompanies a brand new model. The expert insists: “These cars have not yet reached the age where major components typically start to fail.” In other words, the purchase is still made during a calm period of the vehicle’s life cycle.
However, these benchmarks change depending on the category. On electric vehicles, the dealer advises aiming for younger people, because the evolution of batteries is widening the gap between generations. “If you’re buying an EV, look for a slightly newer model. Technology is changing so quickly that a two-year-old model can be a great deal.” Conversely, a premium SUV or luxury sedan may deliver their best opportunities a little later. The strong depreciation linked to maintenance costs then works in favor of buyers. The general idea remains the same: look for the area where the price curve stops nosediving without yet entering the phase where maintenance expenses increase. This is why, according to him, the vehicles offering the best deals are those put into circulation three or four years ago. For the year 2025, this therefore concerns vehicles from 2022 and 2023.
When it comes to older cars, Charlie Reid tempers the enthusiasm that good deals sometimes arouse. They attract with their displayed price, but their maintenance can quickly change the situation. He believes that a complete maintenance history sometimes weighs more than a year less on the clock. To remember!








