Apatel323
Well-Known Member
- Thread starter
- #1
Has anyone leased a Rivian and bought the vehicle shortly after? Under a normal purchase, I wouldn't qualify for $7500 tax credit, so wanted to consider this option. Thank you.
Sponsored
Most people say it's Ill advised to buy it out right away. You don't save any interest doing it and give up your option to walk away after lease end and the built in gap insurance in case you total your car.Has anyone leased a Rivian and bought the vehicle shortly after? Under a normal purchase, I wouldn't qualify for $7500 tax credit, so wanted to consider this option. Thank you.
It depends on what the actual terms of the lease buyout are, that is the important question I haven't seen definitively answered.Most people say it's Ill advised to buy it out right away. You don't save any interest doing it and give up your option to walk away after lease end and the built in gap insurance in case you total your car.
Just imagine if rivian values tank and your car is worth less than the buyout price... It's not totally out of the realm of possibilities of a massive price drop, value of used cars plummet, rivian start catching fire, etc.
True. Pretty sure they don't have a 'one pay' option yet, but you're right that you need to see the docs to know for sure.It depends on what the actual terms of the lease buyout are, that is the important question I haven't seen definitively answered.
Some have claimed that you have to pay the entire 'rent charge' even if you buyout early, if true then what you say is correct. But... if it is like most other auto leases and you only pay the capitalized cost remaining + residual then you would save on 'rent charges' for all remaining payments.
Someone on Reddit posted some terms of an R1T lease over 36 months and I think 12,000 miles? I don't remember specifically but interestingly the rent charge was about $7500, which if, course, equal to the $7500 tax credit cap cost reduction.It depends on what the actual terms of the lease buyout are, that is the important question I haven't seen definitively answered.
Some have claimed that you have to pay the entire 'rent charge' even if you buyout early, if true then what you say is correct. But... if it is like most other auto leases and you only pay the capitalized cost remaining + residual then you would save on 'rent charges' for all remaining payments.
I'm curious on this too. The lease details seem hard to find; especially where pre-paying and buying out are concerned.It depends on what the actual terms of the lease buyout are, that is the important question I haven't seen definitively answered.
Some have claimed that you have to pay the entire 'rent charge' even if you buyout early, if true then what you say is correct. But... if it is like most other auto leases and you only pay the capitalized cost remaining + residual then you would save on 'rent charges' for all remaining payments.
Assuming you would have financed a purchase, the APR % you pay on a lease is comparable to what you’d pay in interest for financing a purchase. So, you’re still better off by $7500 by leasing.Thank you for the responses. If I didn’t buy out the lease right away and paid the lease over 3 years and purchased it at the end, would my total cost be the same as buying it now or more or less? The $7500 credit on the lease makes it interesting.
Not quite.So, you’re still better off by $7500 by leasing
Per the post’s title, the comparison I thought is between:Not quite.
Looks like the following fees are associated with a lease only but not a purchase:
Acquisition fee: $895
Disposition fee: $495
Total: $1390
So I think the number people should really consider is $6110, which is still a significant amount no doubt.
Another thing to consider is mileage. If I'm paying for 10,000 miles annually on a lease I'd personally want to use every single one of those miles. It's like trying to return a pre-paid car rental tank of gas on fumes. I personally only put about 5000 miles per year on my cars thanks to lots of travel and a short commute. Others might struggle with potentially exceeding their allotted mileage and I have no idea what the extra mileage fee is on a lease.
Many moving parts overall and what's best is going to vary from person-to-person.
Yeah, I see the disposition fee as the "walk away fee". I liked the MF/interest rate as compared to buying and if the value tanks I can just walk away at the end. Mileage is my biggest issue, I just want to go drive the thing.Per the post’s title, the comparison I thought is between:
- Purchase v
- Lease and then exercise purchase option
If you exercise purchase option, there is no disposition fee, and miles don’t matter, since it’s your car ultimately anyway.