Lincoln Imp
Well-known member
- Feb 2, 2009
- 5,964
There's no definitive answer to this question.
It depends on the car you buy and the driver you are.
I make no claims about my driving other than to say I am very kind to my cars. For the last 30 years or so it has therefore made sense for me to buy new and keep for a decade. My current car is a Skoda with 135,000 miles up. Well-serviced from the day it was made, the only non wear and tear replacements have been bulbs. It almost stopped depreciating three or four years ago and since then it has been the cheapest car it is possible to own.
Lease cars are convenient and cashflow-sensible but if you think about it all you are doing is buying the off-a-cliff depreciation that comes with a new car. If you can buy an ex-lease car with a great guarantee you're coming near to beating the system I suppose.
It depends on the car you buy and the driver you are.
I make no claims about my driving other than to say I am very kind to my cars. For the last 30 years or so it has therefore made sense for me to buy new and keep for a decade. My current car is a Skoda with 135,000 miles up. Well-serviced from the day it was made, the only non wear and tear replacements have been bulbs. It almost stopped depreciating three or four years ago and since then it has been the cheapest car it is possible to own.
Lease cars are convenient and cashflow-sensible but if you think about it all you are doing is buying the off-a-cliff depreciation that comes with a new car. If you can buy an ex-lease car with a great guarantee you're coming near to beating the system I suppose.