Car Lease vs Buy Calculator (Canada)
Compare estimated monthly payments and total cost for leasing vs buying, using common dealer inputs.
Inputs
Lease inputs
Buy / finance inputs
How to use
- Enter vehicle price, tax rate, and your comparison horizon.
- For leasing, set cap cost, residual %, and APR or money factor.
- For buying, set down payment, loan APR, and loan term.
- Click Calculate and compare total costs, monthly payments, and charts.
Tip: If you only know lease APR, money factor is commonly approximated as APR/2400.
Lease vs Buy in Canada: how to compare the real cost
Leasing and buying often look similar on a dealer worksheet, but the long-term cost is driven by different mechanics. A lease payment is mainly depreciation (cap cost minus residual) plus a finance charge (money factor), with taxes added depending on your province and contract structure. When you buy, your payment comes from a standard loan amortization. This calculator compares both options over the same time horizon so you can see which choice is cheaper for your situation.
Start with the basics: enter the vehicle price and your combined sales tax rate (GST/HST/PST). Choose a comparison horizon (24–60 months). For leases, pay attention to the cap cost, residual percentage, and whether your rate is provided as APR or money factor. For buying, set your down payment, APR, loan term, and fees. Fees and end-of-lease charges can change the winner, so include them if they apply.
How to read the results: lease total cost includes due-at-signing (cap reduction, fees, deposit), monthly payments, and disposition fee if entered. Buy net cost is estimated as down payment + payments + fees − resale value after the same number of months. Resale value uses your residual/resale assumption, so treat it as a planning model (not a guarantee).