AutoSpaceDeals Guide
Car Leasing Guide
Leasing can be confusing at first, but most deals come down to a few important numbers: monthly payment, due at signing, term, mileage, money factor, residual value, and incentives.
What Is a Car Lease?
A car lease is similar to a long-term rental. Instead of paying for the full price of the vehicle, you pay for the portion of the car’s value that you use during the lease term.
At the end of the lease, you usually return the car, buy it out, or lease/finance another vehicle.
How a Lease Payment Works
Your monthly lease payment is mainly based on:
- The selling price of the car
- The residual value
- The money factor
- Taxes and fees
- Incentives or rebates
- How much is due at signing
What Is Money Factor?
Money factor is the lease version of an interest rate. A lower money factor usually means a better lease deal.
Money Factor × 2400 = Approximate APR
Example: a money factor of 0.00150 is approximately equal to a 3.6% APR.
What Is Residual Value?
Residual value is what the lender estimates the car will be worth at the end of the lease.
A higher residual value usually lowers the lease payment because you are paying for less depreciation.
Example: if a $60,000 car has a 60% residual, the estimated lease-end value is $36,000.
What Is Due at Signing?
Due at signing is the total amount paid when starting the lease. It may include first month’s payment, taxes, registration, fees, and sometimes a down payment.
A lower monthly payment with a large due-at-signing amount is not always the better deal. Always compare the effective monthly cost.
Effective Monthly Payment
Effective monthly payment helps compare deals with different upfront amounts.
Effective Monthly = (Monthly Payment × Term + Due at Signing) ÷ Term
Example: $399/month for 36 months with $3,000 due at signing has an effective monthly cost of about $482.
Common Lease Incentives
- Loyalty credit
- Conquest credit
- Lease cash
- College graduate incentive
- Military incentive
- EV or clean vehicle incentives
Incentives may depend on location, credit approval, current vehicle ownership, brand eligibility, and lender rules.
Common Lease Mistakes
- Only looking at monthly payment
- Ignoring the due-at-signing amount
- Putting too much money down
- Not checking mileage limits
- Forgetting broker, dealer, tax, and registration fees
- Assuming every incentive applies to everyone
What Makes a Good Lease Deal?
- Strong discount off MSRP
- Low money factor
- High residual value
- Useful incentives
- Low due at signing
- Clear fees and terms