Lease vs Buy Car Calculator
Whether leasing or buying wins depends almost entirely on how long you keep your cars. This calculator models a chain of leases against buying and holding — investing the monthly difference so both paths use identical cash — and shows your total net cost, ending position, and break-even point.
Verdict
Over your 6-year horizon, buying works out about $7,204 cheaper than leasing a new car every 3 years.
Break-even: buying overtakes leasing after about 3.6 years of ownership.
The pivot: if you actually replace your car every 3 years anyway, leasing is much closer to break-even — try setting the horizon to 3 years.
Lease (new one every 3 years)
$640.84/mo
- Due at signing
- $2,641
- Total net cost
- $50,565
- Equity at end
- $0
Buy & hold 6 years
$870.76/mo
- Down payment + fees
- $2,000
- Total net cost
- $43,361
- Equity at end
- $15,086
What's driving this
- You keep cars roughly 6 years — well past a single 3 years lease. Long holding periods are where ownership wins.
- The lease's money factor (≈6% APR) is cheaper money than your 7% loan.
- After month 60 the loan is done — you'd own payment-free for 1 year while the lease keeps billing.
- Depreciation does the heavy lifting on both sides: the car sheds $27,414 of value over your horizon either way — the question is who absorbs it and what your cash earns meanwhile.
Year-by-year comparison table
| Point | Lease net cost | Buy net cost | Advantage | Car value | Loan balance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 year | $10,754 | $15,273 | Lease +$4,519 | $34,000 | $36,363 |
| 2 years | $18,692 | $23,117 | Lease +$4,426 | $28,900 | $28,201 |
| 3 years | $28,839 | $29,605 | Lease +$766 | $24,565 | $19,448 |
| 4 years | $36,389 | $35,373 | Buy +$1,016 | $20,880 | $10,063 |
| 5 years | $43,686 | $39,898 | Buy +$3,787 | $17,748 | $0 |
| 6 years | $50,565 | $43,361 | Buy +$7,204 | $15,086 | $0 |
All defaults are editable estimates, not live market rates — confirm your money factor, residual value and fees with the dealer or lender before signing. Every formula is documented on the methodology page.
How this calculator works
The model runs three calculations most lease-vs-buy tools skip. First, serial leasing: if you lease, you'll lease again — so costs include every due-at-signing, disposition fee and mileage charge across repeated leases, not just one. Second, buy-and-hold: loan payments end, maintenance rises with age, and you recover resale value at your horizon. Third, invest-the-difference: whichever path spends less each month invests the gap, so the comparison deploys identical money — the honest way to compare a cheap payment against equity.
Every formula, default and simplification is documented — with a fully worked example you can check by hand — on the methodology page. To understand the inputs, start with how car lease math works and why the break-even horizon dominates the decision.
Frequently asked questions
Is it smarter to lease or buy a car?
What makes this calculator different from a simple payment comparison?
What is a money factor and how do I convert it to an APR?
Are the default money factor, residual and rates current market rates?
Can I share or link to a specific calculation?
Related calculators
- Lease Payment Calculator — just the monthly payment math, from money factor and residual.
- Auto Loan Calculator — payments, total interest and an amortization schedule.
- Total Cost of Ownership Calculator — depreciation, fuel, insurance and maintenance combined.
- Car Depreciation Calculator — the value curve that drives both sides of this comparison.