Is Leasing a Car Cheaper Than Buying? Run the 3-Year Math
Leasing a car can have a lower monthly payment, but the three-year cost depends on resale value, fees, mileage, and equity. Run the math with a real scenario.
The lower monthly payment is not always the cheaper car decision. Leasing usually compresses the payment because you are paying for use, mileage, and depreciation during the lease term. Buying can cost more upfront, but it may leave you with equity and more flexibility if you keep the car longer.
Enter the lease offer, loan terms, down payment, mileage, fees, and expected resale value. The calculator compares total cost over the horizon you care about so the decision is based on the whole deal, not just the payment.
Use these as a quick scope check before you rely on the output.
Leasing can look better when you want a new car every few years, drive predictable mileage, and value a lower monthly payment more than building equity. Buying often improves when you keep the car past the loan term or drive more than a lease allows.
Compare cash due at signing, fees, taxes, financing charges, mileage limits, maintenance, insurance, resale value, and whether you own anything at the end. A lower monthly payment can still lose over the full ownership period.
Money factor is the lease financing charge, similar to an interest rate. Residual value is the car's expected value at lease end. Together with the negotiated price, they drive how much depreciation and financing you pay for.
Most leases cap annual mileage and charge for extra miles or excess wear at the end. If you drive unpredictably, carry kids or gear, or expect to end the lease early, those charges can erase the apparent monthly-payment savings.
You usually return the car, buy it for the residual value, or start a new lease. The cheapest option depends on the car's market value, mileage, condition, purchase-option fees, and whether you still want the same vehicle.
Practical examples that connect the calculator to real planning decisions.
Leasing a car can have a lower monthly payment, but the three-year cost depends on resale value, fees, mileage, and equity. Run the math with a real scenario.
Compare leasing vs buying a car with a real 2026 scenario. Learn how monthly payments, mileage limits, equity, fees, and time horizon change the real cost.
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