Again I am very new to buying cars, how would go about doing this?
What is your budget? Either a Toyota Corolla or Honda Civic make excellent entry-level vehicles. Of course if buying one used you do need to research specific years to avoid those that have problems, and have a mechanic do a pre-purchase inspection of any candidate.
Avoid dealers if at all possible, most are ripoff artists, private sales are preferred.
I am new to buying cars. Being ripped off has happend to me but I am not good with stuff in buying cars. That is can I do somthing that I can referance so I don't have that happen?
Thank you so much for your help.
Stick with Toyota and Honda in general for true and tried and propensity for fewer issues over the course of ownership. As was already mentioned, looked under FAQ at our used car buying guide. You didn’t say which class of vehicle you are looking at (I.e. sedan, van, CUV/SUV, truck, etc.) or mention constraints, but looking at Toyota and Honda (for brand) is a good place to start.
I will definitely go for a Honda or Toyota. They will be very reliable and get you from point A to point B. As someone mentioned here, avoid dealerships since they will rip you off. Anything in particular that you are looking for?
It depends on your budget. I think you should get Toyota Corolla or Honda Civic for entry-level reliable vehicles.
In the video below Scotty talks about Civic and Corolla years to buy or avoid; can be a good starting point.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7az0i6Dr_Js
What country?
Whats your budget?
How many miles do you expect to drive per year? Mostly city? Mostly freeway? Mix?
Us, budget unknown, miles unsure, vegas, mix
Whatever your budget, I'd think about if you bought the car second hand, it might be cheap, but if it was expensive new then you'll be paying a premium in parts. So look at what it sold for new.
Generally inline four engines are cheaper to maintain than V8 engines for example. But then V8 engines (at least the older ones) apparently last longer.