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Tesla Lease Buyouts — More Than Meets The Eye, So Many Options


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The following is a Tesla leasing analysis, as well as a look at how leasing offers many advantages but also has significant drawbacks. First, though, Tesla boosts sales with many different incentives, so let’s list some of the others for a broader perspective.

Tesla seems to be pulling out all the stops to sell its cars around the globe, including the following in the US:

Below is a video from my friend Dennis that talks about some of the details of the leasing and some things to think about. I then summarize those points, in addition to mentioning some others below.

Some Great Advantages Of Leasing

Some Bad Things I Don’t Like About Leases

Two Very Different Deals

Below is an example of two models that appear to be vastly different deals.

You notice the cash price of the Performance Model Y is $6,500, or 17% more than the Long Range Rear-Wheel Drive.

Now the lease payment (with the same $2,999 down payment, 36 months, and 10,000 miles a year) is double for the Performance! That seems odd. If I wanted the Performance, I would either just finance it or pay it off quickly if I needed to lease to get the tax credit.

You notice the finance payment is 18.8% higher for the Performance model, very similar to the 17% difference in price. Let’s look at the residual values and see if that tells us anything. The Long Range RWD has a residual value of $28,292, or $9,198 less than the cash price, while the Performance model has a residual value of $31,728, or $12,292 less than the cash price. This is 33% more depreciation than the Long Range model, but really only about $1,000 more than expected. The big elephant in the room is the Long Range has $10,764 in payments over 3 years and the Performance has $21,564 in payments, a shocking $10,800 more in payments for a car that is only $6,500 more to buy new. So, the lease seems to be a good deal for some vehicles.

The following don’t seem to be great lease deals to me:

Conclusion

It does get complicated, but I hope I gave you some things to think about. In one sense, you want to decide what car best meets your needs first, but with all the different ways to buy the different vehicles, it is easy to talk yourself into an upgrade or downgrade just to get a better deal. Let me know in the comments if you agree with my analysis and see any other angles that I missed. Regardless of what you decide and if you even decide to buy a Tesla or some other vehicle, it might be good to buy before 2025, since the battery materials requirements change on January 1st, and then on January 20th, when we get a new president, we might have more changes that will likely not be positive for electric vehicle buyers.

 

If you want to take advantage of my Tesla referral link to get Reward Credits, here’s the link: https://ts.la/paul92237 — but as I have said before, if another owner helped you more, please use their link instead of mine. If you want to learn more about Tesla’s new referral program (August 2024), Chris Boylan has written an excellent article on it.

Disclosure: I am a shareholder in Tesla [TSLA], BYD [BYDDY], Nio [NIO], XPeng [XPEV], NextEra Energy [NEP], and several ARK ETFs. But I offer no investment advice of any sort here.


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