New Car vs. Certified Pre-Owned: The 30% Rule
Written by
CarSavr Editorial Team
Founder & Editor-in-Chief
Reviewed by
CarSavr Editorial Team
Last updated:
6 min read
If a 1-2 year-old certified pre-owned (CPO) is at least 30% cheaper than the same trim new, CPO almost always wins on total cost. The math.
The 30% rule
Pull both prices: new MSRP and CPO with similar trim/mileage. If CPO is 30%+ cheaper, the depreciation savings overwhelm the slightly-higher CPO interest rate and the (small) maintenance cost differential.
Why CPO beats used (and usually beats new)
CPO programs include a manufacturer-backed inspection (typically 150+ point), a powertrain warranty (typically 7 years / 100k miles from in-service date), and roadside assistance. The 'used car risk premium' that makes used scary largely disappears.
Where new wins
New beats CPO when: (1) you plan to keep the car 10+ years (warranty value pays off), (2) the model has a known reliability issue that improved in the latest model year, or (3) the manufacturer is running a subvented 0% APR promotion that more than offsets the depreciation.
The hidden risk with CPO
Not all 'certified' programs are equal. Manufacturer-certified (Toyota TCUV, BMW CPO) is rigorous. Dealer-certified is often just an inspection sticker. Always verify the certifying entity before paying the CPO premium.
Frequently asked questions
Are CPO interest rates higher than new?
Slightly — typically 0.5–1.0 points higher than new-car rates. The price savings still typically beat the rate gap on the 30% rule.
Should I get a CPO that's already 4+ years old?
Be careful — many 'CPO' programs only certify cars under 5 years old. Beyond that, the warranty coverage thins and you're really buying a used car with a sticker.
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