Cookie Preferences

We use cookies to improve your experience, analyze site traffic, and support our marketing efforts. You can choose which cookies to allow below. Learn more
Necessary (always on)
Analytics
Marketing

Car Buying Tips

Expert guidance from Frankman Motor Company to help you make smarter vehicle decisions

Can You Lease a Used Car?

The short answer: technically yes, but you almost certainly shouldn't. Used car leases are rare, expensive, and riddled with downsides that most shoppers don't expect. Here's everything you need to know — and why financing through Frankman Motor Company in Sioux Falls, SD is the smarter path to your next vehicle.

Used Car Leasing: Technically Possible, Rarely Worth It

If you've been shopping for a pre-owned vehicle and wondering whether you can lease instead of buy, you're not alone. It's one of the most common questions our finance team hears. The honest answer is that while a small number of dealerships and financial institutions do offer lease arrangements on used vehicles, the practice is uncommon for good reason — and the terms are almost never in the buyer's favor.

The vast majority of lease programs you see advertised are manufacturer-subsidized deals designed exclusively for brand-new vehicles. Automakers use leasing as a tool to move new inventory, and they back those programs with guaranteed residual values and promotional interest rates. None of those incentives carry over to the used car market.

How Does a Used Car Lease Work?

A used car lease works on the same basic principle as a new car lease: you pay for the vehicle's depreciation over the lease term, plus interest (known as the money factor), plus any applicable fees. At the end of the term, you return the vehicle.

Here's where it breaks down for used vehicles:

  • The capitalized cost (starting value) is the used vehicle's sale price — lower than new, which seems appealing at first glance.
  • The residual value (projected end-of-lease value) is also significantly lower, because the car has already gone through its steepest depreciation curve and continues to lose value.
  • The money factor (interest rate) is typically higher on used vehicle leases because they carry more risk for the lessor.
  • Your monthly payment covers the gap between the capitalized cost and the residual value, divided by the number of months — plus interest. Because the residual is low relative to the sale price, that gap is often larger than people expect.

The bottom line: Even though the sticker price on a used car is lower, the math behind a used car lease often produces monthly payments that are uncomfortably close to what you'd pay financing the same vehicle — except with financing, you actually own something at the end.

Why Most Dealers Don't Offer Used Car Leases

There's a reason you'll have a hard time finding a dealer willing to put together a lease on a pre-owned vehicle. The economics simply don't work well for anyone involved.

  • Residual values are unpredictable. Manufacturers publish residual value guides for new vehicles, but used cars vary wildly based on mileage, condition, accident history, and market demand. This makes it extremely difficult — and risky — to set a guaranteed buyout price two or three years into the future.
  • Higher risk for the lessor. The leasing company is essentially betting on what the car will be worth when it comes back. With a used vehicle, that bet carries significantly more uncertainty, which is why interest rates are higher and terms are less favorable.
  • No manufacturer subsidies. New car leases benefit from manufacturer incentives — reduced money factors, inflated residual values, and special promotional rates. Those subsidies do not exist for used vehicles, eliminating the biggest advantage of leasing.
  • Used vehicles depreciate less predictably. A three-year-old car doesn't depreciate at the same rate as a new one, but individual factors like mechanical reliability, maintenance history, and market shifts create unpredictable value swings that make lease structuring difficult.

What About Certified Pre-Owned (CPO) Leases?

Some manufacturers have occasionally offered lease programs on their certified pre-owned vehicles, and this is the closest thing to a legitimate used car lease you'll find. However, these programs come with significant limitations:

  • They're typically restricted to late-model vehicles — usually one to two years old with low mileage — which means the price savings compared to new are minimal.
  • CPO lease programs are available at select franchise dealerships only, not independent dealers.
  • The money factor (interest rate) on CPO leases is almost always higher than the promotional rates offered on new vehicle leases from the same manufacturer.
  • Selection is extremely limited — only specific models in specific conditions qualify.
  • These programs come and go depending on manufacturer incentives and market conditions. They're not consistently available.

Worth noting: Even when CPO leases are available, the monthly payment difference between leasing and financing the same CPO vehicle is often so small that financing becomes the obvious better choice — because you build equity and own the vehicle outright when you're done.

The Real Downsides of Leasing a Used Car

If you're still considering a used car lease, it's critical to understand the full picture. These are the problems that make used vehicle leasing a poor financial decision for nearly every buyer.

Higher Monthly Payments Than Expected

Because the residual value on a used car is so low, you end up paying for a larger chunk of depreciation than you would on a new car lease. The "lower price" advantage evaporates quickly when you see the actual monthly numbers.

Higher Interest Rates

The money factor on a used car lease is typically much higher than what you'd see on a new vehicle lease or even a traditional used car loan. Lenders charge more because the risk is greater, and you pay for that added risk every single month.

Mileage Limits on an Already-Driven Car

Lease mileage restrictions still apply — typically 10,000 to 12,000 miles per year — but you're starting with a vehicle that already has miles on the odometer. You're renting a car with 30,000+ miles and being penalized if you drive it "too much."

You Own Nothing at the End

After two or three years of payments, you hand the keys back and walk away with zero equity. No trade-in value. No asset. Nothing. With financing, every payment moves you closer to full ownership.

Wear-and-Tear Charges on a Used Vehicle

At lease end, you'll be inspected for excess wear and tear — but you're returning a vehicle that already had pre-existing wear when you got it. Distinguishing your wear from existing wear creates disputes and unexpected charges at turn-in.

Warranty Coverage Gaps

A new car lease is typically covered by the full factory warranty for the entire lease term. A used car may have limited or no factory warranty remaining, leaving you responsible for repair costs on a vehicle you don't even own.

Extremely Limited Selection

Very few lenders or dealers will write a used car lease at all. Your vehicle choices are severely restricted, often limited to a handful of specific models, ages, and mileage ranges that the lessor is willing to take the risk on.

No Equity Buildup Whatsoever

Every dollar you put into a lease — down payment, monthly payments, fees — is gone forever. There's no asset accumulation, no trade-in leverage for your next purchase, and no financial return on what can amount to thousands of dollars paid over the lease term.

Used Car Lease vs. Finance: Side-by-Side Comparison

When you stack leasing and financing next to each other for a used vehicle, the differences become clear. Here's how the two options compare across the factors that matter most.

Leasing a Used Car

  • You never own the vehicle
  • No equity buildup — payments are gone
  • Mileage limits on a car with existing miles
  • Higher money factor (interest rate)
  • Wear-and-tear charges at turn-in
  • Possible warranty gaps during the lease
  • Cannot sell or trade freely
  • Cannot modify or customize the vehicle
  • Extremely limited dealer and lender options
  • Early termination penalties if plans change
Not recommended

Financing a Used Car

  • You own the vehicle when it's paid off
  • Every payment builds equity
  • Drive as many miles as you want
  • Competitive interest rates available
  • No wear-and-tear inspection or charges
  • Can add extended warranty protection
  • Sell or trade at any time — it's yours
  • Customize and modify however you like
  • Widely available at nearly every dealer
  • Flexible terms — refinance or pay off early
The smarter choice

Example: Monthly Payment Comparison on a $20,000 Used Vehicle

Used Car Lease (36 mo) ~$345/mo Higher rate + low residual = more depreciation cost
Traditional Financing (60 mo) ~$370/mo Similar payment — but you OWN the vehicle at the end

Why Financing Is the Better Choice for Used Vehicles

When you finance a used vehicle instead of leasing, you gain control, flexibility, and long-term financial benefit. Here's what financing gives you that leasing never will.

You Build Real Equity

Every monthly payment reduces your loan balance and increases your ownership stake. When you're done paying, you have a vehicle worth real money.

No Mileage Restrictions

Drive as far as you want, whenever you want. Road trips, long commutes, weekend getaways — there are no per-mile penalties when you own your vehicle.

Full Ownership at Payoff

Once the loan is paid off, you own the vehicle free and clear. No more monthly payments — just reliable transportation that's entirely yours.

Sell or Trade Anytime

You can sell privately, trade in at a dealership, or use your equity toward your next vehicle whenever you choose. It's your asset to manage.

Flexible Loan Terms

Choose from multiple term lengths, refinance if rates improve, or pay off early without penalty. Financing puts you in the driver's seat financially.

Make It Your Own

When you own the vehicle, you can customize it however you like — aftermarket upgrades, paint, accessories. A leased vehicle must be returned in near-original condition.

When Might a Used Car Lease Make Sense?

To be fair, there are a handful of very narrow scenarios where someone might genuinely consider a used car lease. These situations are rare, and even in these cases, financing still tends to be the stronger option — but here they are for completeness.

Very Limited Circumstances

  • Short-term transportation need — You need a vehicle for exactly 24-36 months and are certain you won't want to keep it (though a short-term loan still typically makes more financial sense).
  • Business use with specific tax benefits — Some business structures may benefit from lease deductions, though a CPA should evaluate this on a case-by-case basis.
  • Access to a specific CPO lease deal — If a manufacturer is running a rare CPO lease special on a specific vehicle you want, the subsidized terms might bring the cost closer to reasonable.
  • Very low annual mileage — If you drive under 8,000 miles per year and the mileage cap doesn't concern you, the restriction matters less — but you still build zero equity.

Our recommendation: Even in these scenarios, we encourage buyers to run the numbers on financing first. In nearly every case, the long-term financial outcome of owning the vehicle outperforms the short-term convenience of a used car lease. Our payment calculator and buying power tool make it easy to compare.

Frankman Motor Company's Approach: Financing That Puts You in Control

At Frankman Motor Company, we don't offer used vehicle leases — and we're upfront about why. We believe our customers deserve to build equity, own their vehicles, and enjoy the freedom that comes with traditional financing. That's a better deal, period.

Our finance team, led by Kevin Marlow (Finance Director) and Nate Russell (Finance Manager), works with a wide network of lending partners to find competitive rates for every credit situation. Whether you have excellent credit, are building credit for the first time, or are working through past credit challenges, we have lending relationships designed to help.

Here's what financing through Frankman looks like:

  • Multiple lender options — We shop your application across our lending network to find the most competitive terms available for your profile.
  • All credit types welcome — There is no minimum credit score to apply. We work with first-time buyers, rebuilders, and everyone in between.
  • Transparent process — We walk you through every number so you understand exactly what you're signing and why.
  • Flexible terms — Choose the loan length, down payment, and monthly budget that works best for your situation.
  • Quick, easy applicationApply online in minutes, or visit our dealership at 26874 SD Highway 11 in Sioux Falls for an in-person consultation.

Frequently Asked Questions

Technically yes, but it is extremely uncommon. Very few dealerships or lenders offer leases on used vehicles because residual values are difficult to predict, manufacturer lease subsidies only apply to new cars, and the financial risk is higher for everyone involved. The terms on a used car lease are almost always less favorable than traditional financing.
Most dealers don't offer used car leases because the economics don't work well. Manufacturer-subsidized lease programs are designed exclusively for new vehicles. Used vehicles have unpredictable depreciation curves, making it risky to guarantee a residual value two or three years out. The financial risk is higher, profit margins are thinner, and there is far less demand compared to traditional financing.
Not necessarily, and this is one of the biggest misconceptions. While the vehicle's price is lower, the residual value at the end of the lease is also significantly lower — meaning you're financing a larger portion of the depreciation. Combined with higher interest rates on used leases, your monthly payment can be surprisingly close to what you'd pay financing the same vehicle with a traditional auto loan. The key difference is that with financing, you own the vehicle at the end.
Some manufacturers have offered limited CPO lease programs on certified pre-owned vehicles, but these programs are rare and restricted. They're typically limited to late-model, low-mileage vehicles at select franchise dealerships, with higher money factors than new car leases. These programs come and go based on manufacturer incentives and are not consistently available.
Financing is almost always the better option for a used vehicle. When you finance, you build equity with every payment, face no mileage restrictions, own the vehicle free and clear when the loan is done, and can sell or trade at any time. A used car lease provides none of those benefits while typically coming with higher interest rates and mileage limits on a vehicle that already has miles on the odometer.
No. Frankman Motor Company does not offer used car leases because we believe traditional financing provides significantly better value for our customers. Our finance team works with a network of lenders to find competitive loan rates for all credit types — so you can own your vehicle and build equity from day one. Apply for financing online or call us at (605) 250-5016.
At the end of a used car lease, you return the vehicle, pay any excess mileage charges and wear-and-tear fees, and walk away with nothing. You have no equity, no trade-in value, and no vehicle. You would then need to arrange new transportation — either leasing or buying another vehicle — starting from scratch. With financing, you'd own the car outright at this point.
There is no minimum credit score required to apply at Frankman Motor Company. Our finance team works with buyers across the entire credit spectrum — excellent credit, limited credit history, and past credit challenges. We connect you with lenders who can work with your specific situation. Apply online to get started.

Visit Us

26874 SD Highway 11
Sioux Falls, SD 57108

Call Our Finance Team

(605) 250-5016

Finance Team

Kevin Marlow, Finance Director
Nate Russell, Finance Manager

Skip the Lease — Own Your Next Vehicle

Why rent a used car when you can own one? Apply for financing with Frankman Motor Company and start building equity from your very first payment. All credit types welcome.

Copyright © 2026 Frankman Motor Company. All rights reserved.
Skip to main content Calculate Your Payment