This article compares auto financing (borrowing to purchase a vehicle, owning it after loan payoff) and leasing (paying for vehicle use during contract term, returning at end). Core loan features: (1) loan term (36-72 months typical), (2) interest rate (APR) (3-15% depending on credit), (3) down payment (0-20%), (4) monthly payment. Leasing factors: (1) capitalised cost (negotiated price), (2) residual value (predicted value at lease end), (3) money factor (interest equivalent), (4) mileage allowance (10-15k miles/year). The article addresses: objectives of auto financing decisions; key concepts including depreciation, gap insurance, and early payoff penalties; core mechanisms such as amortisation, lease vs buy break-even; international comparisons and debated issues (new vs used, EV incentives); summary and emerging trends (subscription models, EV lease credits); and a Q&A section.
This article describes auto loans and leasing without endorsing specific products. Objectives commonly cited: minimising total cost, matching payment to budget, and aligning ownership with usage patterns.
Key terminology:
Lease vs buy comparison (example, $35,000 vehicle, 3 years):
| Lease | Buy (60-month loan) | |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly payment | $350-450 | $600-700 |
| Down payment | $0-2,000 | $3,500-7,000 (10-20%) |
| End of term | Return car or buy at residual | Own vehicle worth ~$18-22k |
| Mileage limit | 10-15k/year, excess fees | Unlimited |
| Maintenance | Oil changes, tires (wear items) | Same + major repairs after warranty |
When leasing makes sense:
When buying makes sense:
Early loan payoff: Most auto loans are simple interest (no prepayment penalty). Paying extra reduces total interest. Check contract for precomputed interest (rare, penalises early payoff).
Debated issues:
Summary: Lease offers lower payment, new car frequently, but mileage limits and no equity. Buy builds equity, costs more monthly, but cheaper long-term if kept 6+ years. Auto loans rarely have prepayment penalties.
Emerging trends:
Q1: Should I pay off my auto loan early?
A: If interest rate > expected investment returns (e.g., 6%+ ), yes. If rate low (0-3%), invest extra instead. No prepayment penalty for most loans.
Q2: What is a good lease deal?
A: Monthly payment ~1% of MSRP (350on350on35k car) with $0 down = reasonable. Lower is better. Check residual value (higher is better) and money factor (convert to APR).
Q3: How much down payment should I make?
A: 10-20% reduces interest and avoids negative equity. Zero down possible with excellent credit but increases monthly payment and risk.
https://www.consumerfinance.gov/auto-loans/
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