Taking Out The Fear
Buying or leasing a new vehicle can feel intimidating. You never quite know whether you'll walk out with the car you actually wanted, or end up paying more than you should have.
At West Coast Auto, we take that uncertainty out of the equation. We compare offers across our network to get you the best rate available. We don't push add-ons you didn't ask for. You get a straightforward price, and we'll walk you through every step before you sign anything.
"It's a common question: lease or buy, which is better? The honest answer is it depends on what matters most to you."
Lease vs. Buy
Leasing and financing are simply two different ways to get into a vehicle. Each comes with its own trade-offs, and the better option depends entirely on your situation.
Buying
You pay for the full cost of the vehicle, no matter how many miles you drive. Usually a down payment, upfront sales tax, and an interest rate based on your credit.
Leasing
You pay only for the portion of the vehicle's value you use while driving it, often with no down payment, plus a finance rate called a money factor.
What Matters Most To You?
Beyond the financial comparison, the right choice comes down to your own priorities.
- A new vehicle every 2–3 years, with no major repair risk? That leans toward leasing.
- Long-term savings vs. lower monthly payments?
- Ownership vs. low up-front costs?
- Being debt-free vs. higher early payments?
There's no single right answer, just the right one for you.
Key Differences
- Cost Basis
- Buying covers the full vehicle cost. Leasing covers only the value you use while driving it.
- Down Payment
- Buying usually involves a down payment. Leasing often requires little to none.
- Sales Tax
- Buyers pay tax on the full price. Lessees typically pay tax only on the monthly payment.
- Financing Rate
- Buying uses a credit-based interest rate. Leasing uses a comparable "money factor."
A Real Example
Lease a $30,000 car with an estimated resale value of $18,000 after 24 months, and you're only paying for the $12,000 difference, plus finance charges and fees. Buy that same car, and you're paying the full $30,000, plus finance charges and fees.
That gap is exactly why leasing usually comes with a lower monthly payment.
How The Payments Break Down
Lease payments are made up of a depreciation charge (the value lost while you're driving it) and a finance charge (interest on the money the leasing company has tied up in the car).
Loan payments are made up of a principal charge and a finance charge. Since every vehicle depreciates regardless of financing, part of that principal is effectively covering depreciation too, money you won't get back.
What's left over is your equity. The longer you drive a vehicle, the less equity remains.
Gap Coverage
Leasing has more moving parts than a simple loan, so it pays to have someone walk you through it before you sign.
"Most leases include built-in gap coverage. Most purchase loans don't."
Gap coverage pays the difference between what you owe and what your vehicle is actually worth if it's totaled or stolen. With today's low down payments and stretched-out terms, it's common to owe more than a car is worth for a big chunk of the financing, most leases protect you here by default; most loans leave you to buy it separately.