You’re Not Just Underwater.
You’re Paying Interest on Sinking.
The truth about negative equity that dealerships don’t want you to read — and the only four ways to actually get out.
The Problem Is Bigger Than Most People Think
Right now, more car buyers are underwater than we’ve seen in years. A recent CNBC report confirmed what I’ve been seeing firsthand — negative equity is rising sharply across the U.S. auto market. This isn’t a fringe issue anymore. It’s systemic.
Why So Many People End Up Here
This didn’t happen overnight. It’s a few things stacking up at once — and the system never corrects you. It accommodates you.
Pandemic-era overpaying
People paid top dollar during inventory shortages. Values have since normalized — fast. If you bought in 2021 or 2022, there’s a good chance you’re underwater right now, even if your payments feel fine.
84-month loan terms
Longer terms lower your monthly payment — but they slow down equity building to a crawl. You’re paying mostly interest for the first two or three years. Depreciation runs faster than your payoff.
High interest rates eating your principal
When rates are elevated, more of every payment goes to interest instead of principal. You feel like you’re making progress. The math says otherwise.
Rolling negative equity forward
This is the big one. People keep trading out of bad situations — into worse ones. Every time you roll negative equity into a new loan or lease, you pay interest on old debt, delay getting ahead, and quietly compound the problem.
“We can make the numbers work” usually means: we can move the problem somewhere else. Negative equity doesn’t disappear. It just grows.
The 4 Real Ways to Get Out
There’s no magic solution. Only trade-offs. Here’s a straight breakdown of every real option — no fluff.
The most common move. You trade in your car, roll all the negative equity into a 36-month lease, and spread the pain across three years. It feels like a reset. It isn’t.
- You pay money factor (interest) on the negative equity the entire term
- Large balances spike your payment fast
- You’re renting a car and repaying old debt at the same time
Choose a car with strong resale value, take advantage of manufacturer incentives, and roll the negative equity into a 5–6 year loan. The monthly hit is more manageable than leasing.
- Spread over a longer term, the payment bump is smaller
- You still pay interest on old debt — just slower
- Risk of repeating the cycle if you trade early
Sell it yourself — Facebook Marketplace, Craigslist, CarGurus. You’ll get more than dealer trade-in value. Pay the difference between the sale price and the payoff amount. Done.
- Reduces the gap significantly vs. dealer trade-in
- Eliminates the loan and fully resets your position
- Requires cash on hand to cover the remaining difference
The option most people overlook — and the one I recommend most often. You don’t roll anything. You don’t trade. You stay in your car and attack the equity gap on purpose.
- You pay zero additional interest on the negative equity
- You reduce interest on your existing loan simultaneously
- You build real equity — not just the illusion of it
“Most people don’t get into this situation because they’re irresponsible. They get there because they focused on the monthly payment, trusted the process, and never saw the full picture.”
Before Your Next Move, Ask Yourself
The real goal isn’t just to get approved or lower your payment. It’s to get back to zero — and then build positive equity. Everything else is delay. If you can’t clearly answer these questions, pause.
Review Your Deal Before You Sign — Free
About to lease, finance, or roll negative equity into a new deal? Let us look at it first. Once you sign, it’s locked in.
- We expose every hidden cost and inflated fee
- We show you the real interest impact over the full term
- We tell you whether this deal actually helps you — or hurts you
Get Your Free Deal Review →
No dealer ties. No commissions. No conflicts of interest. Ever.
