Buy / Lease or other for high mileage???
Discussion
I'm driving myself insane wondering what the best route to go is.
I'm a high mileage driver, circa 30k per annum and I can only keep a car up to 5 years old max, company policy. I don't really want to have a car out of warranty just in case something breaks.
I want a c class c220d estate, facelift with a few extras. I can lease the car for a 3 year total of around £20k or I can buy one for about £32k pre reg only a couple of thousand on the clock and a slightly higher spec.
Would you lease or buy in the hope you can sell / trade in for at least £13k in 3 years and 90k miles time?
I'm a high mileage driver, circa 30k per annum and I can only keep a car up to 5 years old max, company policy. I don't really want to have a car out of warranty just in case something breaks.
I want a c class c220d estate, facelift with a few extras. I can lease the car for a 3 year total of around £20k or I can buy one for about £32k pre reg only a couple of thousand on the clock and a slightly higher spec.
Would you lease or buy in the hope you can sell / trade in for at least £13k in 3 years and 90k miles time?

Would buying one at 1 year old with minimal mileage for < £25k and selling it after a further 2 years and 60k not be the best bet? Still in warranty, misses the first years depreciation and keeps the eventual mileage at a level buyers may still find palatable? Then do the same in 2 years and still be cheaper in the long term?
https://stock.mercedes-benz.co.uk/used/vehicle-det...
https://stock.mercedes-benz.co.uk/used/vehicle-det...
Have you checked Drive the Deal?
E220d estates are sub £30k new.
I was in a similar situation last year. 30k a year and opting out of company car. Also with a 5 year limit.
I went ‘cheap’ but did buy as it was cheaper in the long run than leasing. I jumped out of my company Merc and bought a top of the range, brand new Passat with all the toys for £25k. A year old had very little saving over the online brokers.
I could have gone MB/BMW but kept the cash in my back pocket instead. (However a sub £30k E class albeit with less kit than I’ve got could have been tempting)
Good luck either way.
E220d estates are sub £30k new.
I was in a similar situation last year. 30k a year and opting out of company car. Also with a 5 year limit.
I went ‘cheap’ but did buy as it was cheaper in the long run than leasing. I jumped out of my company Merc and bought a top of the range, brand new Passat with all the toys for £25k. A year old had very little saving over the online brokers.
I could have gone MB/BMW but kept the cash in my back pocket instead. (However a sub £30k E class albeit with less kit than I’ve got could have been tempting)
Good luck either way.
Edited by A900ss on Wednesday 27th February 09:46
interstellar said:
As above.
Turn the car yearly will be the cheapest option. Buy used and on low mileage and turn it at a year or 18 months.
Leasing is £500 a month with nothing to show for it. High mileage drivers usually buy
Of course they have something to show for it - a new car they are driving! If you like a new car every 2 or 3 years, leasing can make perfect sense. If you like to keep cars for a while, then it won't.Turn the car yearly will be the cheapest option. Buy used and on low mileage and turn it at a year or 18 months.
Leasing is £500 a month with nothing to show for it. High mileage drivers usually buy
I do similar mileage and have been lucky with last 3 cars on lease even with the big mileage. Current Volvo v90 r design costs me £485 inc vat on a 1+17 deal. And 30k miles annually
However current lease deals are not as good now and even though I’m a fan of leasing I can see myself having to go down the low mileage used car next time and running it for 18-24months
However current lease deals are not as good now and even though I’m a fan of leasing I can see myself having to go down the low mileage used car next time and running it for 18-24months
SWoll said:
As per the OP his car allowance specifies the car must be < 5 years old. Mine is the same.
Out of interest how do they know?When I had age restrictions they never asked for the V5 (or annual disclosure of what the car was).
A personal plate also masks the age a car is. Take mine (no private plate) it’s a 10 reg F10 BMW but unless you knew what LCI changes were you might think it’s a run out 2018 or at worst 2017 model.... so could be run for another 5 years.
In addition to this not many people have the same line mgr for 5 years so awareness is low.
In the companies which had those policies they only requested the confirmation on joining then that was it - one company I’d literally just bought another car before joining and negotiated that I had a 2 year period of grace manager had changed so I simply carried on running it (was there 5 years before changing company).
Welshbeef said:
SWoll said:
As per the OP his car allowance specifies the car must be < 5 years old. Mine is the same.
Out of interest how do they know?When I had age restrictions they never asked for the V5 (or annual disclosure of what the car was).
A personal plate also masks the age a car is. Take mine (no private plate) it’s a 10 reg F10 BMW but unless you knew what LCI changes were you might think it’s a run out 2018 or at worst 2017 model.... so could be run for another 5 years.
In addition to this not many people have the same line mgr for 5 years so awareness is low.
In the companies which had those policies they only requested the confirmation on joining then that was it - one company I’d literally just bought another car before joining and negotiated that I had a 2 year period of grace manager had changed so I simply carried on running it (was there 5 years before changing company).
Too many people taking the piss by banking the £500 a month and trying bangernomics I would assume.
SWoll said:
Anything like mine they want to see your insurance documents to make sure it's covered for business use + MOT certificates.
Too many people taking the piss by banking the £500 a month and trying bangernomics I would assume.
Sounds like it - my allowance is purely a perk no need for a co car to do my role but it is a way to reduce pensionable pay & in every company I’ve worked for not once has car allowance had any annual increase.... so a cute way to cut down the total inflation increasesToo many people taking the piss by banking the £500 a month and trying bangernomics I would assume.
For OP if that’s the case I’d switch back to company car and suck it up.
You’d be running it to 120k then changing - even then it might not be worth buying from the lease co.
Welshbeef said:
SWoll said:
Anything like mine they want to see your insurance documents to make sure it's covered for business use + MOT certificates.
Too many people taking the piss by banking the £500 a month and trying bangernomics I would assume.
Sounds like it - my allowance is purely a perk no need for a co car to do my role but it is a way to reduce pensionable pay & in every company I’ve worked for not once has car allowance had any annual increase.... so a cute way to cut down the total inflation increasesToo many people taking the piss by banking the £500 a month and trying bangernomics I would assume.
For OP if that’s the case I’d switch back to company car and suck it up.
You’d be running it to 120k then changing - even then it might not be worth buying from the lease co.
SWoll said:
I'm in a similar position at the moment but when I look at the amount of BIK I would be paying for a CC, the loss of allowance and the 45p per mile you can claim for your own car it's still a much better idea for me to opt out and do it myself. All depends on salary and tax rate though I suppose.
I like the freedom to run and choose what car I want - what options etc etc. Plus as you point out yes it’s much better value to meWelshbeef said:
SWoll said:
I'm in a similar position at the moment but when I look at the amount of BIK I would be paying for a CC, the loss of allowance and the 45p per mile you can claim for your own car it's still a much better idea for me to opt out and do it myself. All depends on salary and tax rate though I suppose.
I like the freedom to run and choose what car I want - what options etc etc. Plus as you point out yes it’s much better value to meHere's a conundrum:-
I do the same miles as the OP but I am a one man limited company who put's their PCP through the buisness and also gets the business to pay all the fuel minus private use. I do the majority of miles for business use.
I was told I can only do this with a new car. I reckon I could also go to the dealer and get a nearly new car with low miles at a discount, but don't know if I can still do that?
Your Benefit in Kind tax is based on the value of the car? If I got a bigger car (used) but was the same value as the brand new car would this affect my BIK?
Sorry for the thread hijack OP!
I do the same miles as the OP but I am a one man limited company who put's their PCP through the buisness and also gets the business to pay all the fuel minus private use. I do the majority of miles for business use.
I was told I can only do this with a new car. I reckon I could also go to the dealer and get a nearly new car with low miles at a discount, but don't know if I can still do that?
Your Benefit in Kind tax is based on the value of the car? If I got a bigger car (used) but was the same value as the brand new car would this affect my BIK?
Sorry for the thread hijack OP!
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