Rob M
Active Member
Not necessarily. With the lease you are still borrowing money and paying interest (the "money factor"). For example, in post #614 above the money factor = 0.00220. You multiply that number by 2400 to come up with the interest rate on a lease, in this example 0.00220 x 2400 = 5.28%. That's a couple percentage points higher than the new car interest rate you can get today with excellent credit from some lenders. So in that case, if your goal is long term ownership of the vehicle, it still makes sense to do the buyout and get the benefit of the lower interest rate. The comparison you would want to make is how much in total (including all fees and interest) you spend when buying (with any applicable rebates/incentives applied) vs. leasing (with the generous lease cash) followed by a lease buyout. Keep in mind that if you wait til lease end to do buyout and obtain financing that used car loans have a slightly higher interest rate than new.Help somebody with a small brain understand this... am I correct in thinking that unless one has the cash on hand to immediately fully buyout the car using the lease / buyout discount "trick" it would be dumb to finance the buyout immediately rather than pay the lower monthly lease payment, save the "extra" cash, NOT pay interest on borrowed money (because there isn't any), and then use the saved cash to put down on the buyout and THEN finance the remaining lower balance when the lease is up?