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I am wondering though when a balloon deal such as Ford's RCO or GM's SmartBuy would be more advantageous than a lease (if at any time). What are the differences?
I am not yet in the market, but have read about this option in the past. From what I have read, a balloon deal is written up as a finance deal, but your monthly payments are calculated using sell-residual, and your options at the end of the term are to walk away, buy the vehicle, or refinance. This sounds the same as a lease. So what is the difference and why is this option offered if it is essentially a lease?
Thanks!
Your beter of buying a car if you going to drive that kind of milage.
What I would do is buy a two year old TL with around 20k miles on it. Or get a VW Passat TDI, you would get about 38mpg plus its about 30 cents cheaper per galon so it would save you planty of cash on gas plus the resale will be much better with higher milage. Test drive one and you will see that you like it.
Good luck.
Could I get lease figures for the Honda Civic VP and Accord LX (both coupe and sedan) for 36 months and 15K miles/year?
On hondacars.com, it lists a current offers for these two vehicles (sedan only), but says,
"*The specific featured lease listed is not available to New York residents. New York residents should contact their dealer for New York featured lease. Terms and conditions vary for New York Residents."
Do you know what differences there are for NY leases, especially what their bank/lease fee is?
Thanks.
Thanks
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Even without this information I can tell you that it is never a good idea to put money down when leasing. I say this for two main reasons. The first is that if your vehicle is ever totaled in an accident or stolen and not recovered during your lease, your insurance company pays off the bank that you are leasing it through and your down payment essentially disappears. The second main reason is that down payments on leased vehicles do nothing to reduce their lease-end purchase prices. So this car's purchase option at the end of your lease would be exactly the same, regardless of whether you had put $4,000 down or had made absolutely no down payment at all.
Let me know the answers to the questions in the first paragraph and I will try to give you an idea of how much it should cost to lease this car in your area right now.
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Wonderful vehicles, but something is "hinky" here .. 4k *and* it's a buy back.? .. like Car_man has mentioned, I would be going the other way .......
Terry.
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Here are the lease programs for the two cars that you are interested in if you were to lease them in New York. AHFC's 3 year, 15,000 miles per base money factor and residual value for an '04 Honda Civic VP are currently .00091 and 51%. Its numbers for an otherwise identical lease of an '04 Accord LX are .00080 and 54%. Some banks charge a higher lease acquisition fee to residents of NY, but I believe that AHFC's base acquisition fee is $595 in all states. When negotiating your leases on these cars, make sure to keep in mind that Honda is providing $400 dealer cash on the '04 Civic, $500 on '04 Accord Sedans, $800 on Accord Coupe 4-cyl., and $1,000 on Accord Coupe 6-cyl. models that will help you to negotiate a more attractive capitalized cost on them than you normally would have been able to.
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In your answer to me above, for the 2005 Pacifica, you mentioned the non-touring rates.
I apologize for the mistake, but I am actually interested in the touring model. Can you let me know if the residual and money factor is different.
For my calculations, I am also assuming a $550 Chrysler bank fee - is this correct?
Once again, thanks for your service.
Damon
She's thinking 48mos but I'm trying to convinve her on 36mos. What are the MF's for these two time frames? And what would be a good residual % and cap cost I could get for her for 36 or 48mos? This is for a ~$26K base model S40 in San Antonio. Any incentives or anything brewing that you're hearing?
thanks for any help and I'll let you know how it goes
frank
I am turning in a 2001 RSX next month and I was under the impression that Honda Finance's damage allowance for a returned lease was $1500. I am now reading that they allow $500 for a 'single event'. Don't you know that the inspector estimated the damage for a dent that I have at $505.
So here is my question:
a) does anyone know what the true damage allowance is for an Acura that was leased in 2001
b) do you think I have any recourse with American Honda Finance - it seems a little coincidental that the allowance is $500 and he estimated $505.
If anyone has additional advice on how to avoid/argue paying this fee, I would greatly appreciate it.
Sam
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$429* lease per month for 42 months
Down payment $2,395
Refundable security deposit $450
Acquisition fee $575
First month's payment $429
Rate based on $47,270 MSRP of 2004 Audi A6 2.7 T sedan with quattro including Luxury pkg., Premium pkg., Cold weather pkg., Northeast emissions and destination charge.
Purchase option at lease end for $22,689.60.
I'm interested, and probably ready to pull the trigger, but I have a bunch of questions.
First, what's a realistic cap cost on this car? I gather from earlier messages that Audi is offering $2,000 in dealer cash. Is there a hold back as well? Or are these all built into the lease price in the form of "dealer particpation"?
Second, what are the money factor and residual value for this car? (And is RV calculated against MSRP or purchase price?)
Third, can you give me a simple formula for figuring out what the lease should cost if the cap cost changes (e.g. I go no money down or I negotiate a better price)?
Finally, what's your view of this deal generally? Is there anything comparable that you like better? I know, for example, that BMW is offering a lease deal on the 525i and Mercedes is offering a lease deal on the ML 350.
Many thanks for your help.
Thanks.
-stacey
regards,
kyfdx
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I know that since her lack of credit history might be an issue, what MF should she shoot for?
thanks
frank
regards,
kyfdx
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The insurance company is going to pay us only $1500-$2000 for the car. We initially tried to find a cheap old used car in that price range, but so far have been unsuccessful. Someone suggested to us that a lease might be a good way to get immediate transportation without large monthly payments or a large initial cash outlay.
Unfortunately, we need to move fast, because we are spending $35/day on a rental car. Is a lease an intelligent option? I think we could settle for a less nice car than we were planning on getting after the house sale.
thanks,
lw
Thanks in advance.
45020 MSRP model(premium,cold weather)
36 mth
20k miles per year
in Colorado
how do you think these numbers might change later in the summer based on this being the last model year for the Allroad?
thanks for any info
I don't think you should lease. I think a cheap "commodity car" is in order. Either buy a 3 year-old Prizm for $6-7k or buy a brand-new Tacoma 5sp reg cab for $11. In either case, it's cheap driving for as long as you want... of course, the sales tax is gone, and so is $1-2k, but there shouldn't be surprise expenses with either option.
I despise leasing because there is so little flexibility. It's bad enough to have to ask the bank if you may, please, buy a car.... it's worse to have to ask them, may I please sell it. The nice thing is the option to turn it in and walk away, and the other nice thing is if you get into an accident (and live), it's pretty much the bank's problem.
The "real" solution to your problem is to "always" have $5k lying around for emergencies....
Good luck,
-Mathias