An end-of-lease buyout can be a smart move—or an expensive one—depending on the numbers, the car’s condition, and the fine print in the lease. Use the steps below to compare your buyout cost to real-world market value, avoid common fees and paperwork surprises, and decide whether to buy, return, or move on to a different vehicle.
At lease-end, most drivers land in one of three lanes. The right choice is usually the one that minimizes total cost while matching your needs for reliability, warranty, and monthly payment.
| Option | Best when | Costs to watch | Next step |
|---|---|---|---|
| Buy it out | Residual + fees is below or close to market value and the car is in good shape | Sales tax, buyout fee, registration, financing APR | Request payoff quote and compare to market comps |
| Return it | Residual is higher than market value or the car has wear issues | Disposition fee, excess mileage, wear-and-tear charges | Schedule pre-return inspection and gather documents |
| Replace it | Needs changed or warranty coverage is a priority | Higher payment, negative carryover, add-ons | Price the new deal separately from the old lease closeout |
The biggest mistakes happen when drivers compare the residual value to a car listing price and assume that’s “close enough.” Instead, build a realistic total for both sides of the comparison.
For broader consumer guidance on auto financing and leasing basics, reference the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s auto loans and leases resources.
A clean comparison is simple: what it costs to own this exact car after the buyout versus what it would cost to buy a similar car today.
If you want a structured way to run the numbers and keep your paperwork straight, use the End-of-lease decision tool and checklist to compare payoff totals to real market comps in one place.
Buying your leased car is still a used-car purchase. The difference is you know how it was treated—mostly. A short inspection step can prevent turning a “good deal” into an immediate repair bill.
To confirm recall status by VIN, use the NHTSA recall lookup. If you’re evaluating a dashboard warning during the decision window, keep a step-by-step reference like the Check engine light checklist for evaluating warning lights before purchase so you can separate quick fixes from expensive problems.
For a plain-language overview of buying and owning costs (and common add-on traps), the FTC’s buying and owning a car guide is a helpful checkpoint.
It depends on your total buyout cost versus current market value, the vehicle’s condition and maintenance outlook, and your financing rate. It’s often favorable when the car has low miles, a clean history, and a residual that’s below market—but it’s usually a pass when the residual is above market or costly repairs are likely.
Common fees include a purchase option/buyout fee, sales tax, title and registration costs, and documentation fees (varies by state and whether a dealer is involved). If you finance, interest cost also matters; disposition fees typically apply to returns, not buyouts.
The residual value is typically set by the contract and isn’t negotiable, but some lessors may offer a discount in certain situations. Even when the residual is fixed, you can still reduce cost by confirming the payoff directly with the lessor and pushing back on dealer-added processing or add-on fees if a dealer is used.
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