Lease vs. Buy Calculator

Leasing trades a one-time investment for a recurring payment. The right answer depends on the discount rate, residual value, tax effect, and how long you actually expect to use the asset.

Inputs

$
$
What you could sell the asset for at the end.
years
$
%
Your cost of capital.
$
Often higher when buying.

Results

PV of buying
PV of leasing
Better option

Comparing on present value

The right comparison is the net present cost of the two cash-flow streams over an identical period. Buying involves a large upfront payment, periodic maintenance, and a residual value at the end. Leasing involves periodic payments and (usually) no residual.

PV(Buy) = Price + Σ Maintenance / (1+r)t − Residual / (1+r)n
PV(Lease) = Σ Monthly payment / (1+r/12)m

The lower number wins on cost. But cost is rarely the only consideration.

What the math doesn't capture

Worked example

A printing company is choosing between buying a $180,000 press (residual value $40,000 after five years, $4,000/year maintenance) and leasing for $3,400/month. At an 8% discount rate over five years: PV of buying ≈ $180,000 + $15,968 (PV of maintenance) − $27,224 (PV of residual) = $168,744. PV of leasing ≈ $169,158. Roughly a wash on net present cost; the decision should turn on tax position and balance-sheet preference.

When leasing usually wins

Leasing tends to win for short holding periods, capital-constrained businesses, fast-depreciating assets, and businesses that benefit from the operating-expense treatment. Buying tends to win for long holding periods, low-depreciation assets, businesses with surplus cash, and situations where customization or modification of the asset is needed (typically prohibited under leases).