Buying a car costs more upfront and usually wins over the long run because you eventually own a paid-off asset, while leasing keeps monthly payments lower and the car new but builds no equity. The one-sentence answer: buy and keep the car for many years if your goal is to spend the least overall, and lease only if you value low payments and a new car every few years more than long-term savings. The cheaper path depends mostly on how long you keep cars and how many miles you drive. This is general information, not personalized advice; run the numbers for your specific deal.
How buying and leasing compare
Buying means financing the full price and owning the car once the loan is paid off. Leasing means paying for the car only during the term, then returning it, like a long-term rental.
| Feature |
Buying |
Leasing |
| Monthly payment |
Higher |
Lower |
| Upfront cost |
Down payment and fees |
Often lower upfront |
| Ownership |
You own it after the loan |
You return it at lease end |
| Equity |
Builds equity, ends in a paid-off car |
None |
| Mileage |
No limit |
Capped, fees if exceeded |
| Customization |
Anything you like |
Restricted; return in good condition |
| Long-term cost |
Lower if kept many years |
Higher if you keep leasing |
The pattern is clear: leasing optimizes for low payments and a newer car; buying optimizes for the lowest cost over a long horizon.
Which should you choose?
Use this decision rule instead of focusing only on the monthly payment:
- Keep cars a long time and want to spend the least? Buy, ideally something reliable, and drive it well past the loan payoff. This is the lowest-cost path for most people.
- Drive a lot of miles each year? Buy. Lease mileage caps make heavy driving expensive in overage fees.
- Want a new car every two to three years and value low payments? Leasing fits, as long as you accept that you build no equity.
- Use the car for business? The tax treatment can differ; confirm with a tax professional for your situation.
- Not sure? Default to buying and keeping the car. Over a decade, that usually costs the least.
A simple summary: lease for low payments and novelty, buy and hold for the lowest lifetime cost. Either way, a strong credit profile lowers your rate, so it is worth knowing how to build good credit before you sign.
What to skip
- Skip serial leasing if your goal is to save money. Continuous leases mean a permanent car payment and no asset to show for it.
- Skip leasing if you drive a lot. Mileage overage fees add up fast.
- Skip focusing only on the monthly payment. Compare the total cost over the time you actually keep a car.
- Skip a long loan on a car you will trade in early. You can end up owing more than the car is worth.
FAQ
Is it cheaper to buy or lease a car?
Over a long period, buying and keeping the car is usually cheaper because you end up owning it. Leasing can have lower payments but no equity, so repeated leasing costs more over time.
Who should lease instead of buy?
Drivers who want low payments, a new car every few years, modest mileage, and who do not mind never owning the vehicle.
Do leases have mileage limits?
Yes. Leases cap annual mileage, and exceeding it triggers per-mile fees. High-mileage drivers usually do better buying.
Can I buy the car at the end of a lease?
Often yes, at a price set in the contract. Whether it is a good deal depends on the buyout price versus the car market value at that time.
Where to go next
Leasing vs financing a car, how to choose a credit card, and how to create a budget.