I know you had used the term trucks but as far as getting a van which I just purchased I had a lower down payment than expected. I got the loan through Wells Fargo and they tried to give me more than what the guy I was working with requested for the loan. My wife's credit score and mine are both in the mid-670's according to Transunion so they are not horrible but not great either.
Just a quick question.....
Did you and your wife purchase that van for use here in the Expediting Industry?
If so, is the loan in your personal names and considered a personal loan for that vehicle? (Basically it is since Wells Fargo stopped loaning $$ for commercial vehicles last year)
Again, if so, be careful using that van in a commercial capacity, OK. You have a strong clause in that personal loan agreement that clearly stipulates "No Business/Commercial" use of vehicle.
For the last couple of years, both Wells Fargo and Capital One have been the 2 biggest banking institutions that are still loaning money for vehicles. A lot of guys who were trying to buy new trucks for their businesses have been getting turned down by "commercial lenders", so they've been going to traditional personal financing to buy new trucks by putting the trucks in their personal names instead of their business names. No problem there, but when they go get their vehicles covered with commercial insurance, the insurance companies are sending "commercial use" binders to these lenders.
I know the guys over at Commercial Fleet Financing.com, and they have been averaging a good dozen or 2 new customers a month trying to find financing for them for trucks they just bought a month or 2 ago because Capital One and Wells Fargo are calling their loan contracts due and paid in full now because of breach of contract. Most of the people they've been trying to work with have either just gone with the personal insurance route, using the truck in their business at a huge risk, or just turning the trucks back when CFF can't get them a commercial loan.
So, read that contract carefully. If your adding that van to a company policy, or buying into the commercial binder most Expedite Companies provide, Wells Fargo WILL find out about it.
You'll be in a lot of financial pain if you wreck that Van some 1500 miles from home and the Insurance Company and your Lien Holder (Wells Fargo) start comparing notes on why that Van was where it was at when the wreck happened, what the Van was being used for, and what was in the Van. Insurance could deny claim, Wells Fargo will want the money instead of the wrecked van, and so on.