Used For Sale; 1999 Toyota Camry with reconstructed title for sale in Crabtree, OR
$2,000
Vehicle Details
1999 Year | JT2BF28KXX0202761 VIN | 314,000 mi. Mileage |
$2,000 Price | sedan Body Type | full-size Size |
brown Exterior Color | fair General Condition | rebuilt Title Status |
6 cylinders Cylinders | automatic Transmission | fwd Drive Train |
gas Fuel Type |
Vehicle Description
1999 Toyota Camry with reconstructed title for sale (as is) $2000.00 or best offer
My Grandmother has decided to stop driving (a difficult and very honorable decision) and I now have her car, so I'm selling my old car. My old car runs wonderfully, I just don't have room for both my cars and my daughter's, or money to keep three cars insured and maintained.
The reason the price is so low is the reconstructed title, the millage (about 314,000 miles, and I'm driving it every other week or so for work to keep the breaks, wheels, etc. from being damaged by sitting there too long), peeling clearcoat, dents (My dad bumped into it in the driveway 3 times now. /sigh), and a deer took out a headlight a couple years ago and Progressive decided it was not salvagable (no worries, a professional replaced the headlight and fixed the hood/door damage), but the car is structurally and mechanically in wonderful shape for over 300,000 miles. I've been told as long as you take good care of an old Toyota it'll last forever. I still see my dad's 40 something year old Toyota pickup (he sold 30ish years ago) scootin around town like brand new. The one thing I haven't gotten fixed is the light behind the D for Drive in the dashboard. The light in the gearshift it's self is fine, and the rest of the lights in the dash are fine, just that one LED went out, or a bug got between the light and the letter.
To test drive the car, we can set up a place to meet. LBCC is usualy a good place to do a quick test drive. I'll probably have my daughter with me since it's not recommended to go alone to sell a car. I will need to see your license and proof of insurance before I hand you the keys for a test drive. I hope you don't mind. Hubby and I are already stressing over our student loans. Don't need an insurance fiasco to pile on that. lol
As for payment, I will meet you at your bank and you can transfer the funds there. Direct transfer is preferred, but money order or cash are acceptable. I will require the bank though, again, for your safety and mine. (For your safety, never meet someone in a random location with cash and don't go somewhere secluded! Just a good habit to meet in public places anyway. ^_^) Too many scary stories out there to not be careful. You understand, I'm sure. ^_^
Car has fairly new shocks (replaced in 2018 I think? maybe 2019. Was a year or two before Covid.)
upgraded sterio/cd player (has a usb port but no bluetooth) It had a cassete player originaly
No broken glass or lights.
Two new tires, spare tire replaced with a new tire, and two other tires in good shape.
Air conditioning is great. (Was a life saver this summer!)
My Grandmother has decided to stop driving (a difficult and very honorable decision) and I now have her car, so I'm selling my old car. My old car runs wonderfully, I just don't have room for both my cars and my daughter's, or money to keep three cars insured and maintained.
The reason the price is so low is the reconstructed title, the millage (about 314,000 miles, and I'm driving it every other week or so for work to keep the breaks, wheels, etc. from being damaged by sitting there too long), peeling clearcoat, dents (My dad bumped into it in the driveway 3 times now. /sigh), and a deer took out a headlight a couple years ago and Progressive decided it was not salvagable (no worries, a professional replaced the headlight and fixed the hood/door damage), but the car is structurally and mechanically in wonderful shape for over 300,000 miles. I've been told as long as you take good care of an old Toyota it'll last forever. I still see my dad's 40 something year old Toyota pickup (he sold 30ish years ago) scootin around town like brand new. The one thing I haven't gotten fixed is the light behind the D for Drive in the dashboard. The light in the gearshift it's self is fine, and the rest of the lights in the dash are fine, just that one LED went out, or a bug got between the light and the letter.
To test drive the car, we can set up a place to meet. LBCC is usualy a good place to do a quick test drive. I'll probably have my daughter with me since it's not recommended to go alone to sell a car. I will need to see your license and proof of insurance before I hand you the keys for a test drive. I hope you don't mind. Hubby and I are already stressing over our student loans. Don't need an insurance fiasco to pile on that. lol
As for payment, I will meet you at your bank and you can transfer the funds there. Direct transfer is preferred, but money order or cash are acceptable. I will require the bank though, again, for your safety and mine. (For your safety, never meet someone in a random location with cash and don't go somewhere secluded! Just a good habit to meet in public places anyway. ^_^) Too many scary stories out there to not be careful. You understand, I'm sure. ^_^
Car has fairly new shocks (replaced in 2018 I think? maybe 2019. Was a year or two before Covid.)
upgraded sterio/cd player (has a usb port but no bluetooth) It had a cassete player originaly
No broken glass or lights.
Two new tires, spare tire replaced with a new tire, and two other tires in good shape.
Air conditioning is great. (Was a life saver this summer!)