"But you need to go and view any tidy sounding cars quickly or you’ll miss them."
Yes, very much so, and I'd add that you need to be open-minded about the make/model.
I've bought two cars from gumtree in the last year, neither would have been on the wish list but both (so far) turned out well. Both were viewed and bought the same day they were listed, both from genuine sellers.
Last summer I bought a 2007 Lacetti 1.6 estate, 70k miles, £950. Not a car I'd been searching for, but I was very pleased with it. Scuffs on every corner which the seller's short Asian wife cheerfully admitted to causing as she had problems seeing over the steering wheel. (Most sorted by the application of black nail polish - cheaper tha touch-up.) Seller was a retired mechanic, and conversation with him about stuff he'd done to the car confirmed this. Car ran fine. I gave it to my DiL a couple of months ago when hers needed a new clutch and exhaust and who knows what else - way beyond worth doing. Still performing very well as a spacious and comfortable family car.
Replaced it at very short notice with a 1.2 i10.2009, 53k, £1450. Again bought on same day it was advertised but not a car I'd considered. Very genuine seller, good service history. I had it serviced/fully inspected by my trusted indy and all is fine. (I have an a/c issue and a bit of body panel corrosion to fix, but they're optional).
Both of these cars I'd be happy to take on my pre-covid annual trip to Andorra (2,500 miles) if possible.
So my advice would be:
Keep your eyes open
Buy on condition and history with an open mind as to make/model (but do the research)
Simple is better
Meet the seller and trust your gut feeling
Keep some of your budget in reserve to pay for a good service/inspection and any inevitable repairs it may need.
Don't be dazzled by shiny paintwork etc. -that's cheap and easy to fix and is less important than lackof corrosion and mechanical problems.
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