Capital Decision Toolkit
Equipment Lease vs. Buy
Compare the long-term impacts of leasing equipment versus buying it outright.
Lease Parameters
Operating or finance lease terms
Equipment Value
$75,000
$
Monthly Lease Payment
$1,800
$
/mo
Lease Term
48 months
mo
Residual / Buyout (% of value)
20%
%
The equipment’s value at lease end β your buyout price if you choose to purchase.
Purchase Parameters
Financed purchase or outright buy
Down Payment
$15,000
$
Loan Interest Rate (APR)
7.5%
%
Loan Term
48 months
mo
Annual Depreciation Rate
15%
%/yr
Typical: Vehicles 15β25%, manufacturing 10β15%, technology 25β35%.
Analysis Result
Loadingβ¦
Advantage
β
Metric
π Lease
π¦ Buy (Financed)
Monthly Payment
β
Cash out each month
Monthly Loan Payment
β
Principal + interest
Monthly Difference
β
vs. buying
Total Lease Cost
β
Over full term
Total Buy Cost
β
Down + all payments
Asset Value at End
β
After depreciation
| Cost Factor | Lease | Buy (Financed) |
|---|
Lease makes sense whenβ¦
βΊ
You upgrade equipment every 3β5 years β avoid obsolescence risk
βΊ
Preserving working capital is a current priority
βΊ
The equipment depreciates rapidly (tech, specialized machinery)
βΊ
Operating lease treatment is favorable for your balance sheet
βΊ
Maintenance and service are bundled into the lease payment
Buying makes sense whenβ¦
βΊ
The equipment has a long useful life and holds residual value
βΊ
Section 179 or bonus depreciation can offset significant tax liability
βΊ
You plan to use the asset for longer than the comparison term
βΊ
Ownership matters for your industry (collateral, compliance)
βΊ
Your credit profile earns a low loan rate that offsets total interest
This calculator provides estimates for comparison purposes. Tax treatment (Section 179, operating vs. finance lease classification, depreciation schedules) varies by entity type, jurisdiction, and asset category. Consult your CPA or financial advisor before making financing decisions.