there are many costs associated with owning a car. which of these is not something you'll need to pay for?
You generally do not need to pay a separate fee just to own the car while it sits unused; you only pay when it is registered, insured, fueled, maintained, financed, taxed, or parked somewhere that charges a fee.
Common car ownership costs
When people talk about “the cost of owning a car,” they usually mean a bundle of different ongoing expenses.
- Purchase or lease payments (or the cash price of the car itself)
- Fuel (gasoline, diesel, or electricity for EVs)
- Insurance premiums, which are required in most places to drive legally
- Maintenance (oil changes, tires, brake pads, filters, etc.)
- Repairs when something breaks or after an accident
- Taxes, title, and registration/plate fees charged by your state or country
- Parking (street meters, garages, residential parking fees)
All of these are real cash outflows that come with actually driving and keeping a car on the road.
What you usually don’t pay for
There are a few things people sometimes assume are “car costs” but that you normally do not pay as a direct, separate fee.
- A “just-owning-it” fee: There is no general monthly charge simply for the fact that you own a car; costs are tied to registration, insurance, storage, finance, etc.
- Depreciation as a bill: The car loses value over time (depreciation), but you are not writing a monthly check labeled “depreciation”; it is an economic cost, not a bill you pay to a company.
- Public road construction costs: You fund roads indirectly through taxes or fuel taxes, but you do not get a separate invoice labeled “road-building fee for your car.”
So if your quiz is asking, “Which of these is not something you’ll need to pay for?” and one option is depreciation , the car losing value , or a vague “ownership fee just for having a car” , that is the one you do not pay as a stand‑alone bill, even though it still affects your finances.
Quick scoop:
- You do pay money for things like fuel, insurance, maintenance, registration, taxes, and parking.
- You don’t pay a separate, direct bill for depreciation or a generic “car ownership fee.”
Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.