Talk to your company. How do others go about getting a lease? Is the vehicle leased to you? Do you pay for insurance? Do they check your credit? Or is the vehicle leased to the company, they pay for insurance, and the company's credit is checked.More info on this please![]()
When you lease a vehicle, the title gets handed over to the lessee. If it goes to the company, then you won't be able to the lease-end option. Maybe, maybe not. If it goes to you, then you will be able to take the lease-end option. Then, you could go for the buy option and you would have a used car for less than half the value.
The residual value of the leased vehicle is the cost of the vehicle when new minus depreciation over the life of the lease. Sometimes, the depreciation is more than the total paid during the lease. Say, you had a three-year lease at $500 a month for a $45,000 car. Then $18,000 would have been paid out. If the car depreciated faster in three-years, say it was $25,000, then the residual value would be $20,000 instead of $27,000. If you are getting a luxury car, most likely, the depreciation is going to drop faster than say a Honda Accord.
If you did this, you could potentially just immediately try to sell the car for a small profit instead of keep it.
My brother-in-law did the lease end buy out option on a Land Rover, because of depreciation and costs paid up front, it was a deal to buy it rather return it and buy/lease a new Land Rover or buy a comparable used Land Rover. So if he bought it then tried to sell it, he could have sold it at a profit. But, then to buy a Land Rover that was similar in mileage and condition, he would lose all the profit made on the sale.
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