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Nissan Rogue vs Nissan Leaf (Cost Comparisons)


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Update: the 2013 MPGe rating for the Leaf is actually 116 (not 99), so the calculations below are actually heavily biased in favor of the Rogue. Feel free to play around with the spreadsheet to see more accurate comparisons.

Reposted from EV Obsession (with minor changes):

When I asked readers for feedback on the gasmobiles most comparable to popular EVs about a month ago, we got into some interesting discussions and I got some very useful feedback. For the Nissan Leaf, it was determined that the Leaf was somewhere in between the Nissan Juke and the Nissan Rogue. So, I went ahead and ran comparisons for both of them.

Following up on my Nissan Leaf vs Nissan Juke cost comparison, below is a cost comparison of the Nissan Leaf and the Nissan Rogue.

Non-calculated Pros & Cons

If you read the intro to the piece above, you can skip this bit:

As always, what matters in a cost comparison is what you actually compare (which factors you choose to include), and what assumptions you make. I’m going to be very conservative in my calculations (as in, lean in favor of gasmobiles). I’m doing so for a few reasons:

  1. I think anyone who really cares about human health and the environment is already going to be bikingusing mass transit, or at least driving an EV.
  2. I’m obviously in favor of EVs, in general, so I don’t want to be (or come across as) biased towards EVs in my comparisons.
  3. For simplicity’s sake. Adding in the extra costs I’m going to note below would be more challenging and time consuming. (Of course, if you’re really comparing the costs of these cars in an OCD cost-benefit analysis way, you can add in more variables.)

Now, real quickly, here are some of the factors that are not being included in the cost comparisons below:

Pros

Cons

Anything to add? Drop a note in the comments.

On To The Fun!

vs



When it comes to cost, the Nissan Leaf is such a hands-down winner in this case that I’m just going to run three comparisons. If you want to play with the assumptions yourself, here’s the spreadsheet.

As before, maintenance costs per mile and battery replacement costs are kept constant in my 5 comparisons — see the spreadsheet for assumptions. And the $7,500 federal tax credit for electric vehicles is included in all comparisons.

Comparison #1 Assumptions:

Result:

Nissan Leaf is about $3,000 cheaper than the Nissan Rogue after 1 year of ownership. You save over $10,000 after 5 years of ownership.

Comparison #2 Assumptions:

Result:

Nissan Leaf is over $6,000 cheaper after year 1, and over $16,000 cheaper after 5 years of ownership.

Comparison #3 Assumptions:

Result:

Nissan Leaf is over $2,000 cheaper after one year of ownership, and over $7,000 cheaper after 5 years of ownership.

Of course, as you can see, there’s a lot of variation with different assumptions. Plug in your own numbers and see what you get!

Previous comparisons can be viewed here:


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