
Welcome, I am Moise. And this is my story
It Started With a Mistake That Cost Me Everything.
In December 2023, I arrived in the United States with nothing but hope and determination. After months of waiting, I finally landed my first job as a security officer. I saved every dollar I could — and when I had enough, I did what felt like the right thing: I bought a car.
Cash. $3,000. A 2008 Mitsubishi Outlander.
The seller wasn't honest with me. Within months, the starter failed, the rear shocks were shot, the front bumper was cracked, and the car shook every time it hit a bump. I had been taken advantage of — and I didn't even know it at the time.
So I made a decision: I was going to get a better car.
I walked into a used car dealership ready to trade in and finance my first vehicle. But I walked in blind. I had no credit history. No knowledge of how financing worked. No one to guide me.
They gave me $500 for my trade-in. They never showed me the selling price, the fees, or how they calculated the out-the-door number. By the time everything was signed, I was locked into a 17% interest rate with a monthly payment close to $1,000.
I didn't realize what had happened — until two months later, when I couldn't make the payment.
That moment broke me. I had to call the bank and ask them to repossess the car. I cried. I felt the weight of a decision I didn't fully understand — a decision that damaged my credit for years and left me carrying debt I couldn't escape.
For almost two years, my life was turned upside down because of one transaction I wasn't prepared for.
But That Pain Became My Purpose.
I told myself: "I wish the seller had truly understood my situation — instead of just chasing a commission."
That thought never left me.
I applied for a position at Acura of Pembroke Pines — and I started learning. Every day, I studied financing, credit, fees, negotiation, and the psychology behind car buying. And the more I learned, the more I realized: most first-time buyers walk into dealerships exactly the way I did — uninformed, unprotected, and vulnerable.
That's why I built First Buyers Aid.
Not to sell you a car. Not to earn a commission from you. But to make sure that when you walk into that dealership, you understand every number, every fee, and every decision — before you sign anything.
Because you deserve a car that fits your life. Not a payment that ruins it.
This is personal. And that's exactly why you can trust it.
