Farmwithjunk
Super Member
Dargo said:Whether he is "well ahead instead of buying new" is speculative at best.
This ENTIRE THREAD is speculative at best. It's an interesting topic, no doubt, but calls for an across the board answer for what would be an individual, case by case decision.
Since it was made clear in the original post by Woodbeef that this pertains to "AG tractors", it would depend on (a) how the farm is structured as a business [inc. state/fed tax], (b) how well that farm operation is doing at any given time (c) the particular tractor in question (d) if the tractor is being traded in or sold outright (e) ect, ect, and so on.......
There is no clear cut, carved in stone answer.
In the modern world of leases, $150,000 tractors, and several million dollar per year operating loans, things are different than how I ran my small "pay as I go" operation. And there's still a few of us out there that follow the low overhead road.
Trying to include every possibility in with one set answer will make a rather muddy pool.
In all my years, I never bought a tractor because of its re-sale value if it was one I planned on keeping. I did look at the cost vs. worth at the time of purchase on a few used ones, not knowing how they'd be holding up 5, 10 or even 20 years down the line.