Submitted by SquishyEmerald t3_12792ux in personalfinance

Never leased before, but my financial planner thinks I should because my monthly payments over the 3-year lease period would be less than financing. Full disclosure: I just posted a nearly identical question to r/ELI5, so if you answer here, I still need you to explain it to like I’m 5 (or probably more like 15). Thanks!

0

Comments

You must log in or register to comment.

Werewolfdad t1_jed67om wrote

It’s the same price as financing.

There’s just a call option at the end.

Leasing is a luxury for people who would buy a car every 3 years, which most people aren’t rich enough to do.

5

theoriginalharbinger t1_jed68d3 wrote

> would be less than financing

Well, at the end of 3 years, you would own a financed car.

At the end of 3 years, you turn your lease back in.

Leases are a great way to be spending money perpetually. And lest anyone say something about "unreliability" - the average age of cars on American roads is 12 years. You're fine keeping what you've got.

2

RhondaTheHonda t1_jed784l wrote

I sold cars a few years back and I don’t know that I ever saw anyone turn in lease who didn’t go over their miles. That mileage penalty can cause quite the sticker shock if you’re not paying attention. So you really need to consider how much you drive.

6

84740296169 t1_jed7di2 wrote

leases, you pay the depreciation cost of the car + profit to the owner.

financing, you pay the entire cost of the car and eat the depreciation cost but own the car while paying interest to a financing company.

they should be pretty neutral options for the same car.

2

Fenderstratguy t1_jedaib5 wrote

You need a new financial planner. If you keep leasing for ever increasing costs every 3 years instead of saving money and buying a cheaper car that you hold onto for 10-12 year - you will have a ton of money going towards a slick ride that you never get to invest for retirement.

13

ColdRead_Chicago t1_jedhx80 wrote

I've leased a couple times in the past and was quite happy with it. I was able to drive a new, reliable car with a fixed low monthly cost. On a tight budget that could not squeeze out an unexpected $300 or $2000 for critical repairs, which always seemed to happen just when I'd paid off previous used cars, it was great for peace of mind. I was never even close to going over the annual mile allowance, even with some out-of-state trips. For someone with more resources though, I'm not sure what the advantage of leasing would be, aside from perhaps freeing up other money to invest in something that does not depreciate.

1