| Finding
Good Car Lease Deals |
What Makes
a Good Car Lease Deal?
How do you know a
good deal when you see one? Where do you find the best deals?
Being able to recognize
a good deal or a bad deal is an important part of successful
automobile leasing.
Negotiating or finding
a low lease price (cap cost) is the most important part of a
good car lease deal.
But so is getting
a high residual.
And a low money
factor or lease rate. (see Car
Lease Rates Explained)
And a low acquisition
fee or bank fee.
It's the combination
of all of these elements that makes a lease deal.
It's possible, for
example, to have a nice high residual and a not-so-good lease price, and
still have a good deal overall. Or a low money factor might compensate
for a low residual to make a good deal. All these factors, in combination,
must be taken into consideration when evaluating lease deals.
To the uninformed
automotive consumer, a lease is nearly always seen as a good deal simply
because the monthly payments are lower than loan payments for the same
car.
This is how dealers
want it, and it's why they emphasize monthly payments, not
prices.
Consumers who
get caught in a dealer's lease payment game will nearly always pay too
much.
You can't simply look
at monthly payments to evaluate a car lease deal. You could easily pay
more than sticker price and still have what you believe are attractive
monthly payments. This is the reason many people who are leasing today
are overpaying, and the reason dealers love to lease.
Dealers
count on a high percentage of their leases being based on full MSRP,
or more to uninformed customers who don't know any better.
So how do you know
what is a good lease deal, and what isn't?
Those leasing ads
in the newspaper are they great deals or not? The offer your dealer
just made to you is it a fair deal or rip-off? How about that car-lease
TV commercial you saw last night?
See our article, Understanding
Car Lease Ads, for some answers.
Lease
Deal Analysis
If you're not sure
what a good car lease deal is, how will you know when you see one? How
will you recognize a bad deal? How will you know what deal to ask for
when you're negotiating with your dealer?
It's extremely important
to be able to quickly determine whether a lease deal is worth considering,
based on the complex interaction of cap cost, cap cost reductions, term,
residuals, and money factor.
For example, it is
not sufficient to know that you are getting a great interest rate (money
factor) — because your lease-end residual value may have been adjusted
lower to compensate.
Use a Lease
Evaluation Calculator
You can do the lease
deal calculations and comparisons yourself, if you know how, or you can
use the exclusive Lease Deal Evaluator calculator
a part of our optional Lease Kit
that enables you to easily size up any lease deal for any vehicle make
and model. It's a great tool that helps you equalize the odds in the game
of leasing.
It's one thing to
know what a good deal is, it's another to actually find one. Where are
the good deals to be found?
| If you're
already leasing your car and want to know what kind of deal
you got, the Lease Kit also
has a special Lease Inspector analytical calculator
especially for this purpose. Using figures right from your lease
contract, it'll tell you just how good or bad
your deal was. |
|
Where
to Find Good Lease Deals
There are essentially
three ways to find good car lease deals:
- Newspaper,
radio, and TV ads are a prime source for locating car lease
deals, as are auto dealer's websites. Car manufacturers frequently offer
special limited-time subsidized, or subvented, lease deals on
some of their models. They do this by discounting price and
either boosting residuals or lowering interest rates
(money factor), or both. The combination of all these elements makes
for some great deals.
If you notice
in newspaper ads that all your local dealers for a particular manufacturer
are offering the same or similar deals, it's likely to be one of that
manufacturer's subvented deals, and probably worth your serious consideration.
Most manufacturer-sponsored lease deals are nearly always genuinely
good deals. Just make sure you like the car model being promoted and
can live with any restrictions that may be specified in the small print
of these ads. You may also have to have an excellent credit score (700+)
to actually get the deal as advertised. Check your credit score at MyFICO.com
.
-
Car pricing services - Get discounted prices
from one or more of the popular car referral or pricing services
now available on the web. We recommend InvoiceDealers
and
Edmunds
.
You simply tell them what vehicle you want, they contact dealers in
your area who have agreed to provide the best prices, and the dealers
contact you to present their offers. It's best to ask for quotes from
multiple companies at the same time so that you'll
have plenty of information to compare. CarsDirect
is a little different in that they do most of the work for you.
If you like their deal, you simply go to the dealer, sign your lease
papers, and drive away. No haggling, no stress and strain. We also recommend
Yahoo! Autos for comparing prices from multiple dealers. They have worked out discounted prices with dealers all over the country.
This technique can get you the best lease prices when fully subvented
deals are not available from the manufacturer for the vehicle you want.
A highly discounted price combined with an average money factor and
residual is still a good deal.
- Best Car Deals web site contains a list of current lease deals on many makes and models. The deals come from manufacturers who are placing special lease prices, high residuals, and low money factors on certain models. The deals are genuinely good deals but you should make sure you can live with the term (usually 36 monts), annual mileage limit (usually 10K miles per year), and the down payment, if any.
- Lease takeovers can be the the single best source of low-cost lease deals. Online companies such as Swapalease.com
list thousands of cars that are available from people who must get out of their leases due to financial distress. Since they already got good deals, you can inherit the same deals, with NO MONEY DOWN, low monthly payments, and possibly a CASH INCENTIVE. Pay a small transfer fee and the car is yours.
Using these methods
will get you good lease deals but it doesn't necessarily guarantee that
you'll get the best deal possible. A little negotiating and haggling may
still be required if you want a better deal. Read the next topic, Negotiating
Deals, for some suggested negotiating tactics. |
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