When a flatbed tow truck arrives at a cul-de-sac at seven in the morning, a certain silence descends. Neighbors observe, but no one speaks up. It occurred twice for the same model Porsche Cayenne, two doors apart, in a subdivision in Atlanta last spring. That is no longer a coincidence; instead, it is a pattern that appears in repository logs all over the nation.
For many years, it was assumed that owners of Mercedes-Benzes and Porsches would not have their vehicles repossessed. That presumption is not holding up. Delinquencies on luxury-tier loans are increasing, according to subprime and near-prime auto lenders, and a number of repossession companies that operate in affluent suburbs near Dallas, Charlotte, and the Phoenix metro area claim that their pickup volume in higher-end neighborhoods has significantly increased over the previous two years. It’s not quite a flood. However, the fact that industry people are discussing it is sufficient.
Interest rates are a banal part of the explanation. In 2021 and 2022, when interest rates were low and dealers were essentially pleading with consumers to take out seven-year loans, many of these cars were financed. The monthly payments for a $130,000 Mercedes G-Wagen that was financed at the time now look very different when refinanced or adjusted. When you factor in the sharp increase in insurance costs for high-performance cars, the math becomes unfeasible for households that were already struggling to maintain appearances.
The layering of subscription and feature fees that automakers have implemented recently is another less evident component. Mercedes has experimented with paid performance upgrades that are delivered over the air, while Porsche charges a monthly fee for lane-assist and range optimization. These costs are modest on their own—perhaps $50 or $90 per month—but they add to the already crippling loan, insurance, and maintenance costs for German luxury cars. It’s possible that households that were already on the edge are being subtly tipped by this layering effect—debt plus rent plus rent.

The location of this is striking. Not in impoverished suburbs, but in the ostensibly safe zip codes with well-run schools, well-kept lawns, and two-car garages. Repo agents believe that these defaults are a reflection of how wealth is performed rather than owned in some communities. Arrival is signaled by a Porsche in the driveway. The loan that underpins it frequently indicates something more akin to overreach.
As this develops, it’s difficult to avoid thinking of the 2008 mortgage crisis in miniature—not on the same scale, not even close, but with a similar mechanism. People stretched themselves to live a certain way, relied on steady income or rising values, and were caught when one variable changed. Although auto loan balances exceeding $1.65 trillion nationwide are not new, analysts weren’t entirely prepared for the concentration of distress now seeping into luxury tiers a few years ago.
Dealers, on the other hand, are remarkably silent about it. Off the record, some have acknowledged that these repossessions have contributed to the certified pre-owned luxury inventory’s faster-than-expected growth. As a result, used Porsche auction prices have softened; they haven’t completely collapsed, but they have softened enough for industry insiders to notice.
Rates and how long households continue to view luxury cars as fixed costs rather than optional ones will determine whether this trend continues or reverses. Neither appears likely to change anytime soon at this time. For now, the tow trucks continue to return.


