Alan
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Alan
- Joined
- Feb 28, 2021
- Threads
- 5
- Messages
- 102
- Reaction score
- 174
- Location
- Tempe, AZ
- Vehicles
- Mach-E First Edition
- Occupation
- Retired engineer
Speaking as another engineer...Sadly, I'm also an engineer, thus I strongly suspect that when you factor in the cumulative depreciation costs of those seven EVs, your actual total cost of ownership might not be the slam dunk we both wish it were...
EV depreciation used to be significantly accelerated by the $7500 tax credit that went to new buyers but not to resell buyers (except for a short while with a lesser amount, before both were killed). Depreciation is usually expressed as book value divided by MSRP before credits and other incentives. (Note that lease residuals are based on expected depreciation, but most manufacturers were not compensating for the tax credit impact, as they were mostly using the same depreciation schedules for both ICEs and EVs.) Now that the federal credits are gone, EV depreciation should track much closer to ICE depreciation, exactly as it has mostly done when it is calculated as book divided by actual original acquisition cost for both. The tracking should be even closer once battery recycling becomes widespread, as that will keep salvage values higher as well, as it does for recycled ICE engines and transmissions.
My BMW i3 had horrible depreciation, but much the same as most ICE BMWs. When the "lease" (a pseudo-lease) expired, the book value was 10K below residual, and the dealer let me buy the car at book (after I said I was turning it in, and he should call me once the car hit his resale lot!). I bought a Leaf SL+ to hold me over after my i3 self-destructed a year later until the Tesla Y was due out, but I didn't like it, and got the Mach-e instead. When the Mach-e "lease" (nearly identical pseudo-lease as BMW) expired, the book on my First Edition Mach-e was about $2K more than the residual, so I bought it at the residual. The book on non-First Editions '21s were all under water on the residuals, as expected, as the tax credit was still available to new car buyers.
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