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Emperor Mong



Member Since: 07 Jul 2010
Location: London
Posts: 1435

United Kingdom 2019 Range Rover Autobiography 2.0 PHEV Loire Blue
Leasing versus buying

Thinking about my next Rangie and normally, I just buy them outright. However, am I missing a trick?

Should I be leasing it (it would be private rather than through a company)?
Financing it (rates don't seem competitive - I was quoted almost 8% on something recently)?
PCP (whatever that is)?
Land Rover had some some form of 50% down payments and guaranteed repurchase. Any good?

Just wondering if anyone understands these options and can explain them simply, please?

I suppose I'm looking for something where I stick in what I get from my current car, pay monthly, pay an end payment to get the car or walk away if it is worth less. Oh and I don't get raped.

Post #47453 25th Jan 2011 5:14pm
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MrP



Member Since: 28 Apr 2010
Location: West Sussex
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England 2011 Range Rover Autobiography 5.0 SC V8 Santorini Black

Largely it comes down to personal pref. I used to do PCP on all my cars (Personal Car Purchase - small or no deposit fixed buyback at fixed rate of miles per year etc and monthly payments, basically you are renting the price of the car minus the buyback value, at the end of the period you pay a balloon payment and own the car, hand it back and walk away or use the buyback against a new car). It works well and rates (were) are not too bad.

I decided I wanted to pay less for my motoring (especially with petrol VCool so decided to stop getting brand new and buy used but more for my money without the depreciation. "On first name terms with my local Dealer......now."

'61 Plate 5.0SC Autobiography - in Black ——— Gone
'53 plate 4.4V8 Vogue Bonatti Grey inside and out. ----- Gone

Post #47465 25th Jan 2011 6:08pm
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Gazellio @ Prestige Cars



Member Since: 22 Jan 2010
Location: Chilterns, UK
Posts: 11309

United Kingdom 2010 Range Rover SE Td6 Zermatt Silver

Price: £78,909.16

If you are interested in this NEW 2011 Model Year Range Rover 4.4 TDV8 Vogue:

Contract hire is available on this vehicle and this can be arranged Land Rover Contract Hire

Term: 36 x months

Mileage: 12,000 miles per annum

Initial payment: £4,444.71 + VAT @ 20%

35 x months £1,481.57 + VAT @ 20%

This is subject to status and underwriter approval

This is based on Business use as VAT is shown separately

You then hand the car back and get the latest model.....

Simples Whistle

Post #47476 25th Jan 2011 6:42pm
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Emperor Mong



Member Since: 07 Jul 2010
Location: London
Posts: 1435

United Kingdom 2019 Range Rover Autobiography 2.0 PHEV Loire Blue

So for non-business use (ie I pay the VAT)
That is total payments of £67559.59 for the use of a £78,909.16 car but I have nothing at the end of it.

So if I assume a 6% opportunity cost on my money and pay cash I would pay £78,909.16, miss out on £14,203.65 of potential value and have something worth, let's say £30k in three years. So I have lost 48,909 plus £14,203 - so a total of £63,113.

Is that the right way of looking at it?

Post #47495 25th Jan 2011 7:19pm
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Gazellio @ Prestige Cars



Member Since: 22 Jan 2010
Location: Chilterns, UK
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United Kingdom 2010 Range Rover SE Td6 Zermatt Silver

The deal above only works if its in a company name and the VAT element is reclaimable. About £56k for three years in a brand new Range Rover. Its a good deal for some but not most who should look at Private Contract Purchase, Hire Purchase or simplest of all a re-mortgage (lowest rates) or low interest personal loan. Thumbs Up

Post #47497 25th Jan 2011 7:24pm
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Emperor Mong



Member Since: 07 Jul 2010
Location: London
Posts: 1435

United Kingdom 2019 Range Rover Autobiography 2.0 PHEV Loire Blue

Right. So leasing seems to be for business users.

How does PCP work? Same way?

Anyone remember the Land Rover scheme?

Post #47536 25th Jan 2011 10:30pm
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Gazellio @ Prestige Cars



Member Since: 22 Jan 2010
Location: Chilterns, UK
Posts: 11309

United Kingdom 2010 Range Rover SE Td6 Zermatt Silver
Car Finance Options

Hire purchase
Best for
People who want a simple form of car finance that's easy to arrange.

Typical cost
Between 7% and 13% APR.

How it works
You pay an initial deposit, normally at least 10 % of the car's price. Then you pay the remainder, with interest, in monthly instalments. There's usually an administration fee to pay with the first payment and an 'option to purchase' fee with the final one.

Drawbacks
You don't own the car until the end of the contract – so you can't sell or modify the car without the lender's permission.

If you have a good credit record, you'll find that Best Rate personal loans (or re- mortgages) are usually cheaper.

0% finance
Best for
People who can pay a large deposit.

Cost
None.

How it works
You pay a hefty deposit – 35 to 40% of the car's price isn't unusual – and then there's no interest on your monthly instalments.

Drawbacks
It's expensive on a monthly basis and this kind of car finance isn't available on all cars. You're also unlikely to get a discount on a 0% deal, so it could work out more expensive overall.

Leasing
Best for
People who want a new car regularly without the hassle of owning it themselves.

Cost
Monthly payments are normally between £100 and £400 a month.

How it works
You choose your vehicle and how long you want it for, and state your annual mileage. These three factors determine your monthly payments. With some schemes, you can opt for the payments to include maintenance.

Drawbacks
You normally pay a few months' rental in advance. And you have to take out comprehensive insurance to cover damage – which is costly for expensive cars.

See our review of buying vs leasing to find out more.

Personal contract plan
Best for
People who want to keep repayments low and like a new car every two to four years.

Typical cost
Between 7% and 14% APR.

How it works
You put down a deposit, pay monthly instalments as you go along, and leave a lump sum to pay off at the end of the contract.

The amount you defer, which is set by the finance company, is called the minimum guaranteed future value. The lender guarantees that your car will be worth that amount at the end of the contract.

At the end of the contract, you have three options:

pay the deferred sum and keep the car
sell the car privately to fund the final payment
hand the car back to the dealer.
If the car is worth more than predicted, you can use the difference as a deposit on a new car.

Drawbacks
PCPs usually work out more expensive than hire purchase. And there are a couple of complications. First, you have to estimate your mileage – and you'll be charged (say, 9p a mile) for each mile above the estimate. Second, if you return the car, it has to be in good nick – any damage will be charged to you.

Post #47586 26th Jan 2011 10:46am
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Ajay(UK)



Member Since: 02 Mar 2010
Location: Arundel, W. Sussex
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United Kingdom 2015 Range Rover Autobiography SDV8 Indus Silver

I think thats covers them all Gary Thumbs Up

For me a lease purchase works best, low deposit & monthly payments followed by a huge big fat balloon at the end Confused I guess this gets me a better car "per month" than I could normally expect Whistle

This may not suit everyone, especially some FFRR owners who may just have a few quid under the mattress but as you say its a personal thing and each to their own Very Happy

Andy. 2015 L405 SDV8 Autobiography, Indus Silver with Black Pack.
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Post #47591 26th Jan 2011 11:08am
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Fox



Member Since: 02 Apr 2010
Location: Essex
Posts: 2313

United Kingdom 

Thanks for laying that all out Gary.

Personal choices I guess.

On a bit of HP I was paying 8% in total on top of what I borrowed, over three years.
Which seemed an unbelieably low APR... so I took it. That was with Lombard.

I've always avoided balloons because I had a mental hang up paying interest on the balloon for the whole term of the agreement.

Post #47592 26th Jan 2011 11:27am
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scene247



Member Since: 16 Sep 2010
Location: London
Posts: 126

United Kingdom 

Mentioned a couple of times was re-mortgage. My advice on this would be don't do it. It may seem cheap re APR but remember that it's interest over a 15, 20 or 25 year period so actually really expensive over the lifetime. And also would imagine you don't have the car for that length of time so paying for something long gone.

My sister in law was about to do exactly that and just mentioned in passing about getting new car and re-mortgaging to fund it. I told her as above and so she checked it out and got a personal loan. Was very grateful as nearly got herself tied into paying for a car over 20 years.

Post #47606 26th Jan 2011 12:03pm
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bogie



Member Since: 06 Nov 2010
Location: Notts/Sth Yorks/Lincs border
Posts: 208

United Kingdom 2004 Range Rover Vogue 4.4 V8 Java Black

I always avoid balloons - one way or another youve got to pay for it, balloon just means you pay more interest for the advantage of lower payments...it lets people "afford" more car than they could if they had to meet straight repayment loan payments...

So its just preference, and how good you are with investment

IF you are confident you can invest the capital and make a bigger return than the interest you are paying then go for it ...otherwise keep it simple, pay cash, and dont line the pockets of finance companies Smile

Personally, I buy 3-5 year old cars and pay cash....ive spent far too much on loans and depreciation in my early years ...jeez, I could have retired by now on car depreciation figure alone LOL Wink

..naturally if you are a business user, and its an expense, the all the ex-vat low rate leasing options are very appealing...you dont want all your capital tied up a car fleet.... cheers
bogie

Post #47609 26th Jan 2011 12:10pm
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dubbs



Member Since: 21 Feb 2010
Location: SE London
Posts: 117

United Kingdom 2007 Range Rover Vogue SE Supercharged Buckingham Blue

scene247 wrote:
Mentioned a couple of times was re-mortgage. My advice on this would be don't do it. It may seem cheap re APR but remember that it's interest over a 15, 20 or 25 year period so actually really expensive over the lifetime. And also would imagine you don't have the car for that length of time so paying for something long gone.

My sister in law was about to do exactly that and just mentioned in passing about getting new car and re-mortgaging to fund it. I told her as above and so she checked it out and got a personal loan. Was very grateful as nearly got herself tied into paying for a car over 20 years.


That's the wrong way to use it and how people get in trouble using their equity in the house.

Instead you need to ensure you have an overpayment facility. Then, if you can, you remortgage but then overpay monthly to the amount you'd spend on a loan. Over the term you;ll pay the car off quicker as you're paying far less interest - alternatively you'll pay over the same term but less per month.

Once the amount has been paid back you simply sop overpaying.

Post #47621 26th Jan 2011 12:45pm
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scene247



Member Since: 16 Sep 2010
Location: London
Posts: 126

United Kingdom 

Dubbs, totally agree. This is only availalbe if you have a mortgage that allows the level of overpayment required - effectively like an overdraft facility. And many other factors in the agreement you have, like early payment penalties etc.

Was just highlighting a situation where people (sis in law) believe the low interest rate means cheap borrowing, but also need to consider term of loan, fees, etc, etc. Smile

Post #47628 26th Jan 2011 1:42pm
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Gazellio @ Prestige Cars



Member Since: 22 Jan 2010
Location: Chilterns, UK
Posts: 11309

United Kingdom 2010 Range Rover SE Td6 Zermatt Silver

Yes I was referring to mortgages as the rates can be very low and IF you are lucky enough to have a FLEXIBLE (no fixed term or payments) mortgage and have paid down the balance by at least as much as you need then its a very simple exercise:

1. Drawing say £40000 from Flexi Mortgage Account to Current Account
2. Buy Car
3. Decide how quickly you wish to repay capital (say four years)
4. Divide 40000 by 48 = £833.33
5. Calculate estimated interest on 40k at say 3% = £100 a month
6. Pay additional £933.33 to your mortgage for 48 months
7. At the end of term you will have repaid more mortgage than £40000 (due to flat interest calc)
8. Car finance has only cost you 3%


As long as you are in control of your finances and stick to the plan its a very sensible option for some.

Gary

Post #47640 26th Jan 2011 2:55pm
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