MrInfinity
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Aug 23, 2012
- Messages
- 2,577
About three years ago I got into a car accident and totaled my car. We ended up leasing a new Honda CR-V from a friend of a friend. Our lease is coming up and for various reasons we didn't put a lot of mileage on our car. This now means that we can either lease a new car for $279 per month (about $20 cheaper per month than our current lease) for 39 months, no money down, OR we can finance the buy out of the remainder of the lease for $325 per month for 60 months. The total payments for the life of the lease would be about $11K. The total payments for the life of the car loan would be about $19,500. So the loan would cost us about $8500 more. I asked our dealer friend what the expected trade-in value of the car would be at the end of the loan term and he said he couldn't really predict, but that if we bought a CR-V about 8 years ago and were trading it in today it would be worth about $8K. So economically it seems to be a break-even proposition.
Thoughts on what the better route is? Lease or buy? To me, this is entirely an economic decision -- I don't care about features, keeping up with the Joneses, etc.
One other point. I don't see myself driving our existing car much past the 8 year mark -- our last car starting to suck up repair costs at around year 9 or 10 and also started to feel a lot less safe.
Always strive to buy. Try to not get trapped in a lease cycle, especially at a young age. As you age and buy car after car, owning a little more of them each time, eventually you'll hit a point where you've got yourself a car fully owned, with no payment. With lease, you are committing to never owning and always paying-- and with limitations on top of it. If you damage a leased car, you have problems. If you go over your leased mileage, you've got to pay them. They hold all the cards, right up to requiring you to go to them first when it's time for the next car. When you buy, you own the car, or at least you do thru your loan. You walk away from the dealership with no further obligation to them. Then what you do with it is up to you. Want to run it for high miles with vacations? Go for it. Want to give it to your kids someday? No problem. Car dealerships are pushing lease in the last 10 years or so because it's so profitable to them. They give you a car, lock in payments, and lock you in to coming back when it's time to turn it in. Even with buyouts you have to use their valuation, not what you think it's worth.
Lease will have some value in specific cases, but not as a general recommendation.