Finance or Lease

Something in the air in this forum today. Is it a full moon?

Lets try to express our opinions with out talking down to people.

There's many factors that decide what's right for each persons situation. There is no definte right or wrong here.
 
One factor on a used car is warranty. If you pick up a two year old car, which seems like the best value, you get some factory warranty and the option to buy an extended warranty. Then, your potential repair cost exposure is limited. But, let's assume costs only with the factory warranty to keep it simple. Extended warranty costs would be equal for each scenario, but still, the used car would net two years less coverage.

In my case, it made more sense to get the CX-7 and have a lease payment for 27 months than keep my current vehicle (1998 Expedition) which I owned outright for years and put away money to purchase a car cash in two years. If you factor in $1400 per year for repairs (it was out of warranty) and the cost of gas, the CX-7 is basically "free" for the 27 months ($194 per month). So, $5000 in payments, a $4000 cap cost reduction, and a $19,000 residual for a "purchase" cost of $28,000. You also will have to add $1400 in tax for the residual purchase, the $300 for license fees for a real total of $29,700. I will buy the car at the end for the residual cost. If it is not worth that much, I will turn it in, then buy it for whatever it is worth even further reducing the vehicle cost.

If I bought the car, it would have been $26,000, plus tax ($1700) plus license ($300) for a $28,300 cost. Finance that over 60 months with same $4000 down, even at 7% over 5 years, and you are looking at about $476 per month for a total out out of pocket cost of $28000 in payments plus the down of $4000 for a total cost of $32,000. So, $2300 more than the lease.


How about a used one two years old for $21,000? Add tax of $1400 along with title fees, etc, and the down payment of $4000 to finance that over 60 months (along with the requisite 2 to 3 percent hike over new, since it is used) and we have a $ 390 payment over 5 years for a total cost of $23,400 plus the original $4000 for a total cost of $27,400. So, a savings of $2300 over the lease for two years less warranty and assuming you have NO out of warranty repairs during that time.

I did my homework, and these are the numbers I considered for my decision. Everyone's values are different, but for the marginal cost of new over used, I chose new.
 
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Nicely said HeavyH20!

There really is no cut and dry answer is to what's better, buying or leasing. It all depends on the individual situation.

For my wife & I, we decided to lease our new CX-7 as it worked out better for us than financing or an outright purchase.
 
DeadGeneration said:
Some how I didn't grow up with that sickness


Well everyone prioritizes what they want to spend their money on. Some people want to have a big tv and a booming home theater system. Some need the biggest, newest house (so big they can't afford furniture for it). Some are just happy to put food on the table. Some have a hobby of pouring money into their cars, modifying them.

Deciding how to responsibly spend your money is not a sickness.
 
True. I will probably be going the big house no furniture route as soon as I can afford it. Moving out of FL and into a low tax semi-rural developing area FTW. Focus on land rather then home though since I will be taking offers from businesses looking to knock it down.
 
The bottom line in any scenario is that a car is the worst possible investment you can make since it all it does is lose value over time. I ran the numbers and for me it just made sense to lease at this point over buying. I'm all for buying a car, and I was about 30 minutes away from buying an 04 FX35 before the dealer got all shady and started adding cost to it. I'll most likely buy the CX7 at the end of the lease but I wanted to give it a 3yr test drive per se rather than decide I hate it after a year and take a huge hit on the sell off numbers.
 
This is an interesting thread. Ultimately, only you can decide your priorities in life. Just make sure you make the decision with eyes wide open.

My observation is that the only one who cares what you drive is you. (thumb)

For some people, a new car is very important. For others, it's not. (confused)

As for me, I'd prefer to spend my money on travel and experiences. Also, I'm a very good mechanic so a $2K, 10 year old car suits me fine.

You can decide for yourself.

Ain't America Great? (cabpatch)
 
Spend it where you wish. If you make $200,000 per year, then the CX-7 is a bargain. If you make $20,000, then the CX-7 is pure luxury. It's all where you spend it.
 

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