Anonymous wrote:Are you in VA? If so there is another reason to lease, you do not pay the personal property tax every year. Leasing does have advantages as long as you are OK with having a payment. Your only expense is the payment and insurance if you choose the right car as maintenance is covered on many makes for the first few years. I have leased cars for the last 10 years, I have not paid for an oil change, brakes, tires, etc. in that time.
LOL do you live in VA? Car tax relief is not the full amount of the personal property tax- it's a discounted amount of tax! I have a leased car and have lived in VA for the past few years....!Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
To a different PP, you absolutely pay Personal Property Tax on leased vehicles in VA.
Not according to the VA Dept. of Motor vehicles. If it is a personal lease, you don't.
https://www.dmv.virginia.gov/vehicles/#leased.asp
Some leased vehicles may qualify for Personal Property Tax Relief as provided in § 58.1-3523, et.seq. Vehicles leased to a person (versus a business) and used predominantly for non-business purposes may qualify for car tax relief. If you have not received car tax relief on a leased vehicle that you believe qualifies, contact your leasing company and ask them to be sure to report your vehicle to DMV. If your leasing company has reported your leased vehicle to DMV and you have not received car tax relief, contact your local Commissioner of the Revenue or Director of Finance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
To a different PP, you absolutely pay Personal Property Tax on leased vehicles in VA.
Not according to the VA Dept. of Motor vehicles. If it is a personal lease, you don't.
https://www.dmv.virginia.gov/vehicles/#leased.asp
Some leased vehicles may qualify for Personal Property Tax Relief as provided in § 58.1-3523, et.seq. Vehicles leased to a person (versus a business) and used predominantly for non-business purposes may qualify for car tax relief. If you have not received car tax relief on a leased vehicle that you believe qualifies, contact your leasing company and ask them to be sure to report your vehicle to DMV. If your leasing company has reported your leased vehicle to DMV and you have not received car tax relief, contact your local Commissioner of the Revenue or Director of Finance.
Anonymous wrote:
To a different PP, you absolutely pay Personal Property Tax on leased vehicles in VA.
Some leased vehicles may qualify for Personal Property Tax Relief as provided in § 58.1-3523, et.seq. Vehicles leased to a person (versus a business) and used predominantly for non-business purposes may qualify for car tax relief. If you have not received car tax relief on a leased vehicle that you believe qualifies, contact your leasing company and ask them to be sure to report your vehicle to DMV. If your leasing company has reported your leased vehicle to DMV and you have not received car tax relief, contact your local Commissioner of the Revenue or Director of Finance.
Anonymous wrote:Someone explain to me why buying is better than leasing a car -- here are some numbers:
I have owned a minivan for the last three years. Bought it used for $26k plus $2k in taxes
It is now worth about $10k (dealer estimate aligns more or less with KBB)
That means it cost me $18k to have that car for three years, plus the cost of new tires, brake pads, and other maintenance. So, cost of well over $6k per year to drive a used minivan.
Now I'm looking for a different car -- a three-row SUV (because even though I have lots of kids I'm a little cooler now than I was three years ago). A new Honda Pilot costs ~$38k. A new Ford Explorer costs ~$32k. BUT, I can lease a Ford Explorer for about $270/month plus taxes. and $3500 down That means my 3-year cost to own would be somewhere around $15500 ($300/month plus $3500), less than the $18+ I just spent on three years of a beater minivan. Everyone always says buying is better than leasing, but I'm not seeing it this time. Thoughts? I obviously would have the $10k from my minivan trade-in and probably another $5k to put on the down payment on something new, and then would finance the rest. I have excellent credit.