Leasing can be helpful, but you want to make sure that you have the TIME to read that lease agreement *thoroughly*. Might be worth it to have a lawyer there to read it, too.
I leased for 12 years (3 cars) and was happy for 10 years. And then, even though I thought I had read them thoroughly, I had forgotten bits and pieces over time, and the two early turn-ins and procedures that were followed during them sort of watered down my understanding, and I was surprised by the amount I needed to pay at the end.
So even when you understand it, you might not thoroughly understand or remember it.
Leasing worked for me while I was single. No one ever offered to help me be mechanically inclined, and I never tried to be on my own (apart from an oil and filter change once), so it's nice to have a nice new car under all sorts of warranty. My first lease even had the first 2 years of maintenance stuff included! It was lovely.
But then I met DH, and he's mechanically inclined and he's a person to call if I had a problem, so then I didn't NEED the brand new car anymore.
And, it turns out, they had been rolling over the end-of-lease charges into my new car's lease payments, so the payments had been going up with each car. And I didn't actually realize it.
went through a lease phase then went back to buying but regret buying our vehicles. why? the payments are higher for the same thing and instead of putting the $ towards a new vehicle every few years instead Ihave to to put it into maintenance and repairs like tires and brakes, dents and ever reducing gas milage. I'd rather get the new car. To me buying only makes sense if i am putting on very high milage
Now that is a REALLY interesting perspective! Thank you for that.
But I did once buy tires for my leased vehicle so that's not different, and if the dent had been bad enough I would have had it fixed or would have paid for it at the end anyway, and the normal maintenance had to be done anyway, so...in my situation I'm not sure it would work, but it's still a neat perspective, *especially* if you can get a lease that INCLUDES the maintenance for a few years!
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He had to buy new tires for the leased car and I asked him what happens when he turns the car in? They get to keep the tires after pay off?
If your owned car's tires go bad and you replace them, and then you sell the car...don't the tires go with the car as well?
The benefits of a lease are intangibles.
Fixed predictable cost. Allows you to get more car for the same monthly payment. Allows you to get a new car more often. In some circumstances, it may be easier to write off a vehicle for business use, although the IRS really cracked down on that in recent years.
A lease NEVER makes sense if you are looking for the lowest cost per mile. But people who have the things I mention above as a priority, they are willing to pay for those intangibles.
As long as you KNOW what you are getting into, have good expectations, and WANT and need what you are getting into, it can be good.
I haven't owned a car in more than 20 years. I always drive a new car and I've never been charged a disposition fee or received a bill for damages. I've never gone over the mileage. I just return the car to the dealer and pick up my new car. No down payment - easy peasy. It works for me.
Same dealership/lender? I'd be careful that they aren't just biding their time until you turn it in, to charge you those years of no turn-in fees. It's what VCI did to me, and it was in my agreements, I just didn't realize I wasn't understanding what I was reading at the time.
To another poster who compared leasing to renting versus buying, please stop watching Suze Orman, they are completely different, although I question many who discredit renting over buying your home (it's not as cut and dry as people make it out to be, if you actually run the numbers).
Renting a house/apartment/condo doesn't yield NOTHING like people think. It yields a place over your head for a certain amount of time, a place where you likely do not have to do any maintenance or pay for any big things. It is often a place far bigger and/or nicer than you could get if you were buying it.
Once we stop renting and get a mortgage, sure, we can paint and not worry about it...but what that microwave goes out, WE get to pay for its repair or replacement, we don't just get to call our landlady and have someone sent over to deal with it.
And even if a person puts cash down to flat out buy a place...all it takes is for the city/county/state to decide to build a highway over it, and you discover how much you actually OWN that house and land....