Quote:
Originally Posted by PepsiFree
If someone is leasing they don’t own the vehicle, so I would assume the insurance company just pays out the leasing company and leasing agreement ends once the poster has paid out anything that’s required at that point (at which point they could lease a new vehicle).
Or am I way off.
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Pretty close to what I remember the agreement was when I leased my vehicle/lease buyout.
OTOH, in the event of total loss, then you speak to the lessor and it's their responsibility to get you in an equivalent vehicle (it's not your vehicle). In the event the insurance payout is lower than cost of getting you into an equivalent vehicle, you don't pay extra. In the event insurance payout is higher than the cost of getting you into an equivalent vehicle, you get to keep the difference. I bet they'd manipulate the numbers to be exactly the same, but either way, shouldn't be money out of your own pocket. The original lease payments should transfer to the new lease almost like a credit, minus maybe some tweaks if they had to put you in a higher trim model or lower trim model.
But there may be different lease agreements out there, so I don't know if OP's is different.
I used to think leasing vehicles was throwing away some money, no matter what. But I remember this clause making me realize if I could only save one of two vehicles in a storm, it makes far more sense to let the leased one get destroyed than the vehicle I had fully paid off. It was also sorta like a tiny extra layer of insurance where I could cut my losses and walk away if there was a serious problem with the vehicle. Rare scenario though.