Think of mats in three broad families. Carpet mats feel closest to OEM and look cozy, with options for plush pile and stitched edging. They are great in mild climates and for folks who prioritize a classic look, but they soak up moisture and can stain. Rubber mats are the workhorses: tough, easy to hose off, and heavy enough to stay put. Classic ribbed designs trap debris well, but some can feel a bit industrial.
Fit is the difference between a mat that quietly does its job and one that slides around, buckles, or crowds your pedals. Universal mats are cheaper and can work fine if you are willing to trim along the guide lines. Measure twice, cut once, and never cut past the highest trim line. Custom-fit mats are molded for your exact make and model, hugging contours and covering dead pedals and footrest areas. They cost more, but the coverage and stability are hard to beat.
Insurance can be the trickiest part. The collision damage waiver (CDW/LDW) is not technically insurance—it’s a waiver that says the rental company won’t charge you for damage, usually with some exclusions. Without it, you might rely on your personal auto policy or a credit card benefit. Credit cards often require you to decline the rental’s coverage and pay with that card, and coverage may be secondary (kicks in after your policy) or exclude certain countries or vehicle types. Read a quick summary before you go so you can decide at the counter without pressure.
For quick local sales and zero-friction discovery, Facebook Marketplace is still a monster. Its advantage is simple: your listing rides the social graph. People in nearby neighborhoods see it, buyers can look at your profile, and coordination often happens in minutes. It is fantastic for furniture, appliances, baby gear, plants, bicycles, and anything you do not want to ship. The built-in messaging and searchable community groups make it easy to find buyers who already want your category.
By 2026, three forces will do most of the work on car28 pricing: materials, policy, and money. Materials first. Battery inputs like lithium, nickel, and graphite tend to swing in cycles. If raw material prices ease, base trims can hold the line; if they spike, higher capacity packs and performance editions get pricier fast. Policy next. Import tariffs, local assembly incentives, and clean vehicle credits can knock thousands off or add thousands on depending on where the car28 is built and where you live. Keep an eye on final assembly location and battery sourcing rules. Money last. Interest rates matter. A 1 to 2 point shift in APR changes affordability more than a small MSRP tweak, especially on 60 to 72 month loans. Add supply chain rhythm on top. If production ramps smoothly and inventory normalizes, you get discounts and flexible financing. If demand outpaces supply, expect MSRP to stick, plus a waitlist. In short, the 2026 car28 price will not live in a vacuum. It will ride the same macro currents as the rest of the market.