VSG
Well-Known Member
Most of your post seems to be about the trade in. This process is exactly the same for purchasing vs leasing, and I found it to be easy and quick. Just upload your info and get an offer. If you don't like their offer, don't take it. What could be easier? That's just what you do with Carvana etc. and in fact you probably already have offers from at least one company like that to compare to. Remember if you trade in a vehicle that reduces your purchase price and you end up paying much less in taxes on your new vehicle, so take that into account when you compare offers.Trade-in: enter in your vehicle details and it gives you a number, which is non-negotiable. At this time you either have to accept the offer, decline the offer, or add a different vehicle to trade-in.
The rest of the post makes me think that Rivian has just inserted the lease-specific actions into the "payment method" step of the purchase process, with the rest of the process being the same as purchasing outright. Maybe that makes sense logically, and if you're getting a loan instead it *does* make sense because you can reject Rivian's *loan* offer and go with your own lender at this point, but with a lease you really don't have any options but Rivian so once you've started the process you no longer have a choice about your lease.
While I'm sure the guides etc. don't know the lease details off the top of their heads (this is a very new process after all), I'm sure they can get the details for you. Even most salesmen at dealerships can't tell you the lease details - you have to jump through all sorts of hoops just to get the numbers, and usually there's really only one guy at the dealership who does leases (in my limited experience).
I would not be comfortable committing to a lease without seeing the details first. I think they should be able to give you the basic numbers - I think I've seen everything but the money factor (which tells you the residual value), but the money factor is something that probably varies and they don't want to quote you a number that's going to change next week when you finally get around to leasing.
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