Should I Lease or Buy a $50,000 Car?
Compare leasing versus buying a $50,000 vehicle to determine which option is the better financial choice.
How to use this tool
- Choose the comparison term in months.
- Enter the lease drive-off cash and monthly lease payment.
- Enter the purchase price, down payment, and monthly loan payment.
- Enter the car's expected resale value and any loan balance at term end.
- Read the buy advantage and which option costs less.
On luxury vehicles the lease vs. buy math changes dramatically — use this calculator to find the better deal on a $50,000 car.
Frequently asked questions
- Is it cheaper to lease or buy a car?
- Over a single term, buying is usually cheaper because you keep the car's resale value, while every lease dollar is spent. Leasing can win when the car depreciates fast or you replace vehicles every few years.
- What costs does this comparison leave out?
- It ignores lease mileage-overage and wear charges, the opportunity cost of cash, and the convenience of always driving a newer car under warranty. Add those qualitatively to the dollar result.
- Why does resale value matter so much?
- Resale value is the equity a buyer recovers at the end. A car that holds its value makes buying far cheaper; a car that depreciates quickly narrows or reverses the gap.