Submitted by RolfEjerskov t3_11anym0 in Futurology
hydro00 t1_j9u4mm3 wrote
Reply to comment by strvgglecity in The future holds a 25000$ compact EV leasing at 250$ pr month by RolfEjerskov
He said a lease, you did a loan, but he’s wrong?? K.
strvgglecity t1_j9u81ca wrote
Leasing would cost even more, roughly $580/month for 3 years Leasing is more expensive in total. So yes, I'm right twice.
a_holzbaur t1_j9udmvx wrote
$269/month for 10k miles annually. $275/month for 12k miles annually. $286/month for 15k miles annually.
All lease prices for an ~$25k Corolla …
You are wrong twice. I showed you the math, for a $25k vehicle that exists for both leases and finance via Toyota. And leases are typically cheaper unless you are talking an outlier vehicle with seriously abnormal depreciation curves. So yeah, no. YOU are wrong. Twice.
strvgglecity t1_j9uj0el wrote
Well edmunds.com is wrong then. Leases are more expensive because you don't earn the same equity, although you may pay a lower monthly bill, the total cost will be higher over the same time period. That's why they lease cars at all.
a_holzbaur t1_j9umhis wrote
You know very little about leases. While you can typically choose to execute the purchase of a lease during or at the end of the lease period, the intent is not to build equity. It’s not a purchase. It’s a long term rental.
For a lease, you pay a combination of the estimated depreciation of the vehicle over the period of the contract + interest + taxes/fees. You will pay minimal regular maintenance. Most leases are short enough to avoid any major maintenance, and leases are notoriously poorly taken care of by owners as they just hand the vehicles back in a few years. And that is generally with very few consequences, short of anything major.
For a purchase, you are paying the entire value of the vehicle + interest + taxes/fees + full preventative maintenance, major maintenance and part replacement, etc.
The value of a lease is nearly entirely dependent on the money factor (interest) and the estimated depreciation curve the leasing entity is currently using. A $25k car that’s expected to lose 40% ($10k) in value over a 39 month lease is going to have a higher lease payment typically than a $30k car that’s expected to lose 30% ($9k) in value over the same period.
Leases are not always worse than purchasing. It really does come down to a vehicle by vehicle basis, and is entirely dependent on what the manufactures offers are currently. It’s the same as the math for rent vs buying a home. Not every vehicle, manufacture, or market is the same or even static.
[deleted] t1_j9uefvr wrote
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