How Many Cars Is Too Many?

Autopian Asks Too Many Cars
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We all dream of having our own fleet of cars, but eventually, building a stable of cars can feel overwhelming. Maybe the maintenance is too much to take, maybe insurance is a heartbreaker, maybe you’re just running out of space, maybe you have other commitments in life, or maybe you just want to enjoy everything you own. Most people will find that it’s possible to own too many cars, so today we want to ask what you’d consider to be too many.

I think my realistic maximum is three cars. One for winter, one for summer, one for autocross, track days, and any gaps not filled by the others. At that point, my monthly insurance bills would add up to the payment on a new Corolla, I’d still be able to maintain a decent ratio of DIY to farm-it-out, and there’s some hope that all three will work most of the time. Having a consistently working large fleet of cars that works can be a challenge, as Jason detailed in 2022.

Mydumbfleet

Mind you, the maximum number of cars varies for everyone. Our own Mercedes has a fleet well in the double digits, and David has all manner of vehicles in his possession, some of which even run. In contrast, I know people who will only ever need or want one car in their possession at any one time.

So, how many cars is too many for you, and what makes that number too many? I’d love to read your answers, as ever, in the comments section below.

(Photo credits: David Tracy, Jason Torchinsky)

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132 thoughts on “How Many Cars Is Too Many?

  1. Back in the summer of ’85 I found myself standing in the driveway staring at 7 vehicles only one of which could get me 15 miles to work that day (in one piece and not heavily ticketed) and I knew then & there I had a problem. Took a few years but I did get down to only 2 and the count has stayed there ever since 🙂

  2. My patient husband understands that at some point, we’ll have three vehicles; daily drivers for each of us, plus something “fun” (or if it’s still running, the 2000 Acura that’s been in my family since new). That will be more likely to happen when we have places to put them. For now, two seems like just enough.

  3. I actually look at it the other way around. How few cars can we get by with? We’ve had long periods with 4 drivers in the family and only 2 cars, though we went to three for a few years. We did at the time live in an area with great mass transportation and bicycling routes for commuting, so that helped. Generally have had one large practical vehicle (hauling, towing, dump runs, driving through blizzards, etc) and one fun one. Those roles are currently filled by a 2017 Q7 and a 2014 428i X. Anything I’d need a pickup truck for is taken care of by the utility trailer and the Q7 spends 99% of it’s time with the second and third row seats folded down.

    On the other hand, I own 7 bicycles and gave one away last fall. We also have 7 boats and my herd of guitars/basses currently stands at 11, so maybe my compulsions just lie in other areas. 🙂

  4. My wife said the hard limit is 5. She took the kids to the grandparents house and when they returned we had 6.. and she really didn’t make a fuss. Anyway, we’re back down to 5 and that’s about as many as I can keep running with a full time career and not being wealthy. Two Suburbans was a bit redundant so I sold the 2001 to my brother and life is good.

    2020 Suburban LT
    2008 MazdaSpeed3 GT
    2006 Mustang GT Convertible Premium
    1996 Honda STEPWGN (My daily)
    1991 Honda Beat

    Restoring the MazdaSpeed3 to new condition right now, but all cars are in running/driving condition 🙂

    1. > She took the kids to the grandparents house and when they returned we had 6

      This is why it’s important not to own two VW Rabbits.

  5. We have 4 now, and that’s because I couldn’t possibly squeeze any more in the garage.
    I hate parking any of them outside.
    Now if I only had a heated storage facility…

  6. I think you have too many when owning them starts becoming a chore, which depends on your income, ability to wrench and the reliability of the car.

    Owning a collection of Datsun Zs and Land Cruisers is probably less work than 2 Alfas.

    I also believe you should be in a position to have only one car non operable at a time. Otherwise it means you didn’t realize you’d get overwhelmed, and that’d depress me.

    With my SO we have 4 cars and 1 motorcycle:
    Datsun 280Z – the project car
    Honda CTR FN2 – her fun daily
    BMW Z4 – my fun daily
    Renault Clio 2 – the workhorse/winter beater
    Honda Rebel 125 – formerly her project, now the reliable bike

    Apart from the S30 which is undergoing a full restoration, none of those vehicles is giving us a hard time so adding one to the stable would be doable. As long as it’s not old British or Italian steel.

  7. We’ve got four for two drivers. And three of them are technically mine. And two of those are utes (trucks, if you prefer). And the other one is a Suzuki Vitara (Sidekick) 4 dr. It’s probably too many and the wrong combination but… still.

  8. I’d love to see a map of where all the commenters with 5+ vehicles live. Like, I live in Toronto – I can’t fathom having space for 5 vehicles even if I wanted them!

    Anyway the limit is 2 drivers, 2 cars + 2 motorcycles here. More than that and paying $120/month in insurance to drive something a couple times in that month seems like a poor use of money to me.

    1. Space is definitely tricky but doable. I know people with cars stashed wherever they can beg or borrow space around the city. Maybe a friend’s not using their spot in their condo’s underground car park, or a family member has some spare space behind their business, or a workplace has extra parking to leech off of for a bit. It’s a little precarious, but there’s always a way to get by with more than two in the fleet.

      1. Maybe this will out me as a filthy casual by Autopian standards but I (currently) draw the line at storing a vehicle off-site. Mayyyyybe if I could store it less than a 5 minute walk away…I should ask my neighbour how they feel about me using their driveway, they’re never home anyway…

        And any friend with a condo parking space in Toronto that’s not renting it out for sweet sweet cash…well they have more money than me, that’s for sure.

  9. For me, 6 is too many, but I have 6 anyway, and at one point had 9. The “too many” threshold comes down to annual registration costs and space. I also can’t justify having more than 2 or 3 cars on “normal” insurance, so with 2 vehicles on collector’s insurance, I feel like I’m throwing money away to have more than 4 or 5 vehicles insured at any one time, since I can’t drive them all at once.
    It also depends on purpose though, if the cars don’t overlap in their main purpose, maybe I can justify going over my limit, but honestly sometimes I wish I could go back to having 2 or 3 cars. At this point I feel like that’s impossible though, since I have 2 “forever” cars, and neither would be a practical daily driver.

    Right now it’s justified by:
    Prius – fuel efficient daily driver/long distance car
    Saabaru – winter beater/rally car
    Miata – nice weather top-down car that makes supercharger noises
    Alto Works – nice-ish weather car for small road trips and errands that makes turbo noises
    Silverado – bike/kayak/other stuff hauler, and tow rig
    335d – was going to be winter car but is too low, bought because I wanted a diesel again, but actually has no niche purpose

    Even the Alto and Miata overlap quite a bit, but there is no way I’m ever going to find another rust-free NA Miata for $1300, and also don’t really want to buy and install another supercharger kit, so I’m not letting go of it.

  10. No such thing as too many – only too little time and money (and sometimes gumption). I have three “cars” and four motorcycles. They all serve a different purpose.

  11. My current fleet:

    2012 Volt: The “good” car – available to wife or myself about any time to go any where. Also, the perfect hedge on fuel costs if we have a tight month.
    1994 Cadillac Brougham: The other “good” car. Mainly used for road trips and cars-and-coffee . Hagerty worked with me to come up with a special policy on this one.
    2014 Spark: The crap-weather/winter beater. Cheap. Has a great heater, necessary for those days when the good cars are clean and waxed, not to mention a sponge for salty seasons. Will probably end up as the daughter’s car when she doesn’t want to (or can’t) drive her Corvette.
    1995 Ford Escort: Wife’s beater/work/around-town car. She prefers this to the Volt for visibility reasons.
    2003 Trailblazer: Project. Wife also wanted a beater with more ground-clearance. Still out on the back slab. Maybe this year it will finally be road-worthy.
    1999 Ford F-250: Truck with a tommy gate for landlord/truck stuff (if I’m being honest, the desire for more garage space is what drives my rental-property hobby).
    2000 Ford E-150: Was a parts chaser, now falling to neglect, but runs and is still “inflated-and-plated”.
    2000 XK8, 1982 XJ6, 1988 VW Fox, 1971 Sedan deVille, 1966 Chevy Biscayne: These mostly satisfy my old-car-ADD – something for most any mood and occasion. Plus, always something to wrench on.
    1987 Corvette: daughter’s car who is just shy of getting her license, so it’s in my name.
    1954 Ford F-100, 1987 XJ6, 1968 Coupe deVille, 1969 Sedan deVille, 1984 Mercury Grand Marquis: Parts cars and various projects I may or may not ever get to.

    Let’s see… 18 total which feels just about right. And since I’m completely out of garage space, 19 would be too many. Well, maybe 20… or 21. I’ll let you know after I’ve added a couple more.

  12. I currently have 3, the newest being 20 years old, and they’re all shitboxes. My 28 yo shitbox just failed smog and has a blown head gasket, so I’m waiting on authorization to junk it for a sweet $1k. If I’d junked it before smog check was due, the air quality district would have paid me $1200 to get it off the road.

    I’m thinking of what fun car to add to fleet now that I’m freeing up a parking space. Miata isn’t the answer since I barely fit in one. So taking suggestions for slightly bigger fun cars.

  13. Twice, in my 50s I woke up and realized that I had two cars and two motorcycles in a small two-car garage. Since I commuted by subway, these vehicles did not get the use that they needed. Each time I thinned out the herd. Now that I am married, we have never had more than three vehicles for the two of us. It sounds boring, but the decrease in expense, effort, and time gives me more time to travel and enjoy the vehicles we have.

  14. Five is optimum. My wife and I both have dailies. We have an older pick-up for hauling materials and gardening. I have a small economy car for my business and a toy for fun. The rule for me is they have to fully functioning. Our newest car is eight. My plan is to keep them as long as possible. It would suit me fine if I never have to buy another. I’m done with projects and just want to enjoy what we have.

  15. For me, 2 cars is too many as I only need 1 car and only have parking for one car… though I could squeeze in two cars, but they would both need to be small and it would be tight.

  16. As a single driver household, keeping two vehicles maintained and running turned out to be too much, so I sold my Wrangler. I’d like a fun car and a reasonable daily driver, but my free time limits my wrenching time, so it’ll just be one for now. My boys might be interested in wrenching in a few years, so having a family project car may become a thing then, but as it sits now wrenching on a car is time away from my kids. Already enough of that with work and chores.

  17. The formula for a typical North American suburban family with both parents needing to drive to work:

    x=number of drivers in house – 1

    xmin = 2

    xmax = number of places in driveway.

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