20 Low-Cost Car Leasing Options Budget Seniors, March 22, 2026March 22, 2026 🚗💵 Edmunds • KBB • Experian • Consumer Reports • FTC Verified The complete guide to finding affordable car leases in today’s market — with 20 real vehicle deals from March 2026, expert advice on lease terms, money-saving strategies, and plain answers to every question about leasing on a fixed income or tight budget. © BudgetSeniors.com — Independent. Unsponsored. Always in Your Corner. 💡 10 Key Things to Know Before You Lease a Car The average new car transaction price topped $49,000 in August 2025 per Consumer Reports, and average monthly payments on financed new vehicles reached $748 in Q3 2025 per Experian — making leasing an increasingly attractive alternative. The cheapest current lease deals in March 2026 start at $189–$209 per month with some money due at signing, per U.S. News and KBB. But leasing is not simple: the advertised number is never the full story. This guide explains what to look for, what to avoid, and which specific vehicles offer the best value right now. 1 What is the real “effective monthly cost” of a lease deal, and why does it differ from the advertised price? The effective monthly cost divides total payments plus the down payment by the number of months. A “$199/month” deal requiring $4,999 at signing actually costs $338/month effectively — far more than it appears. This is the single most important concept in lease shopping. Dealers routinely advertise low monthly payments that require a large “capitalized cost reduction” (down payment) at signing. To find the true cost: add all monthly payments (e.g., $199 × 36 = $7,164) plus the amount due at signing (e.g., $4,999), then divide by the number of months (total $12,163 ÷ 36 = $338/month effective cost). CarsDirect and CarEdge both use this method to rank actual lease value. Throughout this guide, all deals show both the advertised payment AND the effective monthly cost so you can compare apples to apples. 2 What are the cheapest cars to lease right now, and what monthly payments are realistic? In March 2026, the most affordable lease deals range from $189–$249/month advertised, with effective costs of $290–$340/month. Budget for $300–$400/month in effective cost for a reliable, new vehicle — well below the $596 average lease payment per Experian. The Mazda3 ($199/mo, $3,499 down), VW Jetta ($199/mo, $4,249 down), Hyundai Elantra ($209/mo, $3,499 down), Kia K4 ($209/mo, $3,499 down), Honda Civic ($209/mo, $3,839 down), and Toyota Corolla ($229/mo, $2,999 down) are consistently among the cheapest non-EV leases in early 2026. For EVs, the Chevy Equinox EV ($259/mo, $4,029 down), Kia EV6 ($299/mo, $3,999 down), and Subaru Solterra ($299/mo, $2,799 down) represent excellent value against the $748 average new-car loan payment. All deals cited are from U.S. News, CarsDirect, KBB, CARFAX, and Edmunds, verified March 9–13, 2026. Most expire March 31, 2026 — check current offers before scheduling a dealer visit. 3 Is leasing better than buying for seniors on a fixed income or a tight budget? Leasing offers lower monthly payments, no large down payment, predictable costs (under warranty), and a new car every 2–3 years. But Consumer Reports notes that long-term, buying and keeping a car is cheaper. Leasing makes sense when cash flow matters more than total cost. Consumer Reports, Bankrate, and AARP all note that leasing vs. buying involves a direct trade-off: lower monthly payments and predictability (lease) vs. lower lifetime cost and eventual payment-free ownership (buy). For a fixed-income senior who drives fewer than 10,000–12,000 miles per year, wants warranty protection, and values predictable monthly expenses, a 36-month lease can be ideal. Key leasing advantages for budget-conscious drivers: lower monthly payments vs. financing, always under manufacturer warranty (no surprise repair bills), and the ability to return the car without managing a sale. Key disadvantages: payments never end, mileage limits (usually 10,000–12,000 miles/year standard), and early termination is costly. 4 What is a “money factor” and how can dealers hide costs in it? The money factor is the interest rate on a lease, expressed as a tiny decimal (e.g., .00125). Multiply by 2,400 to get the equivalent APR. Dealers can mark it up silently — always ask for the money factor in writing and compare it to the published buy rate. The money factor functions like an interest rate on a lease, determining the finance portion of your monthly payment. A money factor of .00125 = 3% APR (multiply by 2,400). Dealers receive a “buy rate” from the lender and are permitted to mark it up, pocketing the difference — similar to how they mark up auto loan rates. Per CarEdge’s 2026 lease guide, dealers commonly add 50–100 basis points to the money factor. Always ask: “What is the published buy rate money factor on this vehicle this month?” You can look up the actual manufacturer-published money factor at Edmunds.com or leasehackr.com. If the dealer quotes a higher number, negotiate it back to the published rate. 5 Are EV leases a good value compared to gas car leases right now? Often yes. Electric vehicles like the Chevy Equinox EV ($259/mo), Kia EV6 ($299/mo), and Subaru Solterra ($299/mo) lease for roughly half the average new car payment of $748/month, and fuel savings further reduce the real monthly cost. In March 2026, EV manufacturers are offering especially aggressive lease deals to move inventory as the market adjusts. Electrek reported in March 2026 that EV lease deals are averaging about half the national average car payment. The Chevy Equinox EV LT with 300-mile range leases for an effective cost of ~$362/month (advertised $259 with $4,029 at signing). The Kia EV6 with 319 miles of range: effective ~$410/month (advertised $299 with $3,999). The Subaru Solterra with 288 miles of range: effective ~$363/month (advertised $299 with $2,799). Important note: The federal $7,500 EV tax credit for leases expired September 30, 2025, per Consumer Reports. However, many manufacturers have offset this with direct manufacturer incentives to remain competitive. 6 What mileage limit should I choose, and what happens if I go over it? Standard leases offer 10,000–12,000 miles/year. Over-mileage penalties run $0.10–$0.50 per extra mile. If you expect to drive less than 10,000 miles/year (common for retirees), negotiate a lower-mileage lease with a lower monthly payment. Per Consumer Reports, excess mileage charges can range from 10 cents to 50 cents per mile over the limit. On a 12,000-mile lease, driving 15,000 miles per year adds $900–$4,500 to your end-of-lease bill. The U.S. average annual mileage is about 12,200 miles per the FTC, but AARP notes many retirees drive significantly less. If you drive 7,000–9,000 miles per year, you can often negotiate a 10,000-mile lease or even a 7,500-mile lease, which reduces the monthly payment because the car depreciates less. Unused miles provide no credit at lease end, so over-negotiating mileage is wasteful. Track your current annual mileage for 3 months before leasing to accurately estimate your annual needs. 7 What fees are typically included at signing, and which can I negotiate? The FTC says to always get the “out-the-door price” in writing. Legitimate fees include the first month’s payment, acquisition fee ($595–$995 typical), tax, title, and registration. Disposition fees ($300–$400) apply at lease end if you don’t buy or respace. Per FTC consumer guidance at consumer.ftc.gov, negotiating the vehicle price (capitalized cost) before discussing lease terms is essential — a lower cap cost directly reduces monthly payments. Fees typically due at signing include: first month’s payment, security deposit (often waived on manufacturer-promoted deals), acquisition fee (set by the financing bank, not negotiable), registration and title fees, and applicable state taxes. Add-ons like extended warranties, paint protection, and gap coverage are optional — per FTC guidance, it is legal to say no to add-ons. A disposition fee of $300–$400 is typically charged at lease end unless you lease another vehicle from the same manufacturer; this is waivable at many brands for loyal customers. 8 How does my credit score affect my lease payment, and what score do I need to lease a new car? Most manufacturer lease programs require a minimum credit score of 660–720 for advertised rates. Per Experian Q3 2025, average lease payments range from $592 (super-prime, 781+) to $624 (subprime, 501–600), a relatively small spread compared to loans. Experian’s Q3 2025 State of the Automotive Finance Market report shows that lease payments vary less by credit score than auto loan payments — because leases finance only the depreciation component of the vehicle, not the full purchase price. Super-prime lessees (781+ credit) averaged $592/month while subprime lessees (501–600) averaged $624/month — just a $32/month difference. The bigger barrier is approval: most manufacturer-subsidized (subvented) lease deals are only available to lessees with 700+ credit scores. If your score is below 660, check your credit report for free at AnnualCreditReport.com (per FTC guidance), dispute any errors, and consider waiting 3–6 months to improve your score before applying for an advertised lease deal. 9 What happens at the end of a lease, and what are my options? At lease end you can: return the car (pay any mileage/wear fees), buy it at the pre-set residual price, or lease a new vehicle. If your car’s market value exceeds the residual price, buying it and reselling can produce equity. The three options at lease end: (1) Return it — walk away. You owe any excess mileage charges and documented wear-and-tear beyond “normal.” A pre-return inspection (offered free by many manufacturers 60–90 days before end) lets you know exactly what you’ll owe. (2) Buy it — at the residual value set at lease inception. If used car prices are high (as they were in 2021–2023), buying can be profitable. (3) Respace (renew) — lease another vehicle, often with loyalty discounts from the same brand. Per CarEdge, many brands offer $500–$2,000 loyalty/conquest cash for returning lessees, which can meaningfully reduce the next lease payment. Never make a large down payment (cap cost reduction) on a lease — if the car is totaled, GAP insurance covers the difference, but down payments are not refunded. 10 Which brands consistently offer the best lease incentives, and where do I look for current deals? Toyota, Kia, Hyundai, Honda, Mazda, Subaru, Nissan, VW, Chevy, and Buick consistently offer the most competitive lease incentives. Check Edmunds.com, KBB.com, CarsDirect.com, and CARFAX monthly for current deals — most run through the last day of each month. Most manufacturer lease deals are set monthly and expire at month’s end (typically the last day of the month). The brands most consistently appearing in best-lease-deal roundups from Edmunds, KBB, CarsDirect, CARFAX, and U.S. News are: Kia (K4, Sportage), Toyota (Corolla, Corolla Hybrid, Tacoma), Hyundai (Elantra, Tucson, IONIQ 5/6), Honda (Civic, CR-V, Prologue), Mazda (Mazda3, Mazda CX-5), Subaru (Crosstrek, Forester Hybrid, Solterra), Volkswagen (Jetta, Tiguan), Chevrolet (Equinox, Equinox EV), and Buick (Encore GX). Kia and Hyundai in particular have aggressively subsidized leases in recent years to build market share, resulting in the lowest effective monthly costs in the market. Sources: U.S. News cheapest lease deals March 9 2026 ($189–$481/mo range); CarsDirect best lease deals March 2026 (Jetta $199; Elantra $209; Sentra $329; Gladiator $419; RAM 1500 $481 effective); KBB 10 best lease deals ~$200 March 2026 (Mazda3 $199; Kia K4 $209; Civic $209; Corolla $229; Sportage $229; Elantra $209; Encore GX $199); CARFAX 10 cheapest deals March 2026 (Toyota, Kia, Honda, Hyundai, Mazda, Subaru, Chevy); Edmunds lease deals March 2026 (updated weekly); Electrek March 13 2026 (EV leases half national avg; Equinox EV $259/mo effective $362; Kia EV6 $299/mo effective $410; Solterra $299/mo effective $363; loyalty $500); LendingTree/Experian Q3 2025 (avg new lease $596/mo up 1.9%; new purchase $748 up 1.8%; avg lease term 35.2 months; super-prime $592; subprime $624); Consumer Reports lease vs buy 2026 (long-term buying cheaper; early termination costly; mileage 10–50 cents/mile; transaction price $49,000+ Aug 2025); FTC consumer.ftc.gov (get out-the-door price in writing; add-ons optional; AnnualCreditReport.com free credit report; co-signer responsibilities); CarEdge 2026 lease guide (money factor markup; cap cost reduction; dealers mark up 50–100 basis points; loyalty/conquest cash $500–$2,000); Bankrate Dec 2025 (Camry lease $538/mo vs buy $861/mo 36-month comparison); Consumer Reports EV lease note (federal $7,500 credit expired Sept 30 2025) 🚗 20 Low-Cost Car Lease Options — March 2026 Deals & Strategies ⚠️ Lease Deals Change Monthly — Verify Before You Visit a Dealership All lease deals below are based on manufacturer incentive data from Edmunds, KBB, U.S. News, CarsDirect, CARFAX, and Electrek as of March 9–13, 2026. Most deals expire March 31, 2026. New offers typically launch on the first of each month. Deals are regional — contact your local dealer to confirm current pricing in your area. Always calculate the effective monthly cost (total payments + down payment ÷ months) to compare deals honestly. 1 Lowest Advertised Price Mazda3 Sedan — $199/mo • Effective ~$296/mo $199/month → Effective ~$296/mo after $3,499 at signing ÷ 36 📅 Term: 36 months 💰 At signing: $3,499 🛣️ Mileage: 10,000/year 💵 MSRP: ~$24,000 The Mazda3 is one of the most refined compact cars on the market and consistently appears among the cheapest leases in KBB’s monthly roundups. With available all-wheel drive on the sedan and a premium-feeling interior well above its price class, the Mazda3 punches far above its lease payment. The 36-month term keeps you within the full manufacturer warranty window. The FWD base trim is the deal vehicle; AWD and the Sport hatchback are available at a modest upcharge. 💡 Pro Tip: Mazda frequently offers loyalty discounts of $500–$1,000 for returning Mazda lessees. If you’re currently in a Mazda lease, ask specifically about the loyalty incentive when pricing the new deal. Lowest Advertised Price 36-Month Term Premium Interior FWD Base Regional Pricing Varies 2 $199/mo West Coast • Best Value for Used Car Switchers Volkswagen Jetta S — $199/mo • Effective ~$296/mo $199/month → Effective ~$296/mo after $4,249 at signing ÷ 36 📅 Term: 24 months 💰 At signing: $4,249 🛣️ Mileage: 10,000/year 💵 MSRP: $23,870 The VW Jetta S deal at $199/month is available in California, Washington, Arizona, Nevada, Oregon, and Colorado through March 31, 2026, with a $1,500 bonus cash incentive included in the price. Note the 24-month term, which is shorter than the typical 36-month lease — meaning your effective cost stays low but you’ll need to re-lease or buy in just two years. This can actually benefit budget-conscious shoppers who want to re-evaluate their vehicle needs frequently. The Jetta is a spacious, comfortable sedan well-regarded by Consumer Reports for value. 💡 Pro Tip: Always check if there’s a “conquest cash” incentive available if you’re currently in a non-VW vehicle. These are often $500–$1,500 on top of the advertised deal and can lower your down payment significantly. 24-Month Term West Coast Special $1,500 Bonus Cash Short-Term Flexibility 3 Luxury-Feel Subcompact SUV for $199/mo Buick Encore GX FWD Preferred — $199/mo • Effective ~$317/mo $199/month → Effective ~$317/mo after $4,249 at signing ÷ 24 📅 Term: 24 months 💰 At signing: $4,249 🛣️ Mileage: 10,000/year 💵 MSRP: $27,995 The Buick Encore GX offers one of the quietest and most refined cabins in the subcompact SUV segment, paired with one of the lowest advertised lease prices available. This KBB-listed deal is available to current lessees of a 2021 or newer vehicle from a competing brand, making it a conquest deal. The standard equipment includes an 8-inch digital gauge cluster and 11-inch infotainment touchscreen. AWD adds just $10/month — worth considering for seniors in snowy climates. 💡 Pro Tip: If you’re in a Toyota, Honda, or any non-GM brand lease, you qualify for the conquest pricing. This is one of the best ways for seniors to step up from economy brands into a premium-feel SUV while keeping monthly costs under $250. Quiet Premium Cabin Conquest Deal AWD +$10/mo 24-Month Term 4 Top Safety Ratings • IIHS + NHTSA Approved Hyundai Elantra SE — $209/mo • Effective ~$306/mo $209/month → Effective ~$306/mo after $3,499 at signing ÷ 36 📅 Term: 36 months 💰 At signing: $3,499 🛣️ Mileage: 10,000/year 💵 MSRP: $23,870 The Hyundai Elantra SE combines above-average interior space for its class with excellent safety ratings from both IIHS and NHTSA — an important consideration for senior drivers. The crisp exterior styling and value-packed feature sheet make it a popular choice. This deal is particularly strong for California region pricing but similar offers are available nationally. The Elantra comes with a standard 5-year/60,000-mile bumper-to-bumper warranty, significantly longer than most competitors, meaning the entire 36-month lease is covered with room to spare. 💡 Pro Tip: Hyundai offers a Blue Link emergency services subscription that includes 24/7 roadside assistance — especially valuable for senior drivers. Ask whether it’s included or add it at minimal cost during lease signing. Top Safety Ratings 5-Year Warranty 36-Month Term Spacious Interior 5 U.S. News 2026 Best Compact Car for the Money Kia K4 LXS — $209/mo • Effective ~$307/mo $209/month → Effective ~$307/mo after $3,499 at signing ÷ 36 📅 Term: 36 months 💰 At signing: $3,499 🛣️ Mileage: 10,000/year 💵 MSRP: ~$24,000 The Kia K4 won the U.S. News & World Report 2026 Best Compact Car for the Money award, reflecting its exceptional value-to-price ratio. The LXS trim includes a 12.3-inch touchscreen, wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, four USB ports, remote start, proximity keyless entry, blind-spot monitoring, and lane-centering assist. Kia’s industry-leading 10-year/100,000-mile powertrain warranty provides peace of mind throughout and well beyond the lease term. The K4 replaced the Forte and represents a significant upgrade in technology and interior quality. 💡 Pro Tip: Kia offers a 24-hour test drive (available at many dealers) — a full day of real-world driving to confirm the vehicle suits your needs before signing. This is particularly useful for seniors evaluating entry/exit ease and cabin ergonomics. 2026 Best Compact Award 10-Year Powertrain Warranty Blind Spot + Lane Assist 12.3” Touchscreen 6 Proven Reliability • Benchmark Compact Sedan Honda Civic LX Sedan — $209/mo • Effective ~$316/mo $209/month → Effective ~$316/mo after $3,839 at signing ÷ 36 📅 Term: 36 months 💰 At signing: $3,839 🛣️ Mileage: 10,000/year 💵 MSRP: $25,890 The Honda Civic remains the benchmark compact sedan for reliability, practicality, and resale value. The Civic LX Sedan comes with a fuel-efficient 2.0L engine, Honda Sensing suite (adaptive cruise control, lane keeping assist, automatic emergency braking, and forward collision warning) as standard equipment on all trims. For seniors prioritizing proven reliability and comprehensive safety technology at a low monthly payment, the Civic is among the safest choices available. The Hatchback version is available at $229/month with the same deal structure. 💡 Pro Tip: Honda Sensing is standard on all Civic trims — not an optional package. This means you get the full driver-assist suite included in the base $209/month price, an important distinction vs. competitors that charge extra for safety features. Honda Sensing Standard Emergency Braking Included Benchmark Reliability Adaptive Cruise Included 7 Toyota Safety Sense Standard • Longer Lease Term Available Toyota Corolla LE — $229/mo • Effective ~$290–$316/mo $229/month → Effective ~$290/mo (NY; $2,999 signing ÷ 36) or $316/mo (KBB; $3,499 signing) 📅 Term: 36 months 💰 At signing: $2,999–$3,499 🛣️ Mileage: 10,000/year 💵 MSRP: ~$23,000 The Toyota Corolla remains one of the most popular lease vehicles globally, valued for exceptional reliability and strong resale value. Toyota Safety Sense 3.0 — including pre-collision system with pedestrian detection, radar cruise control, lane departure alert, and automatic high beams — is standard on all Corolla trims. The New York region deal at $2,999 at signing produces one of the lowest effective monthly costs for a non-EV lease this month. The Corolla Hybrid version is also available at $209/month (NY region effective ~$320/mo) with significantly better fuel economy. 💡 Pro Tip: Toyota dealers honor pricing between regions for “conquest” customers in some cases. If you’re not in the NY or Gulf States region and the local deal is higher, ask your dealer if they can match a better regional offer — dealer-level negotiation is always permitted. TSS 3.0 Standard Pedestrian Detection Hybrid Option Available NY Region Best Deal 8 Best MPG Under $250/mo • Excellent Fuel Savings Toyota Corolla Hybrid — $209–$249/mo • Effective ~$320/mo $209–$249/month → Effective ~$320/mo (NY) to higher in other regions 📅 Term: 36 months 💰 At signing: ~$3,000 🏑️ MPG: Up to 52 city/50 hwy 💵 MSRP: ~$24,000 The Corolla Hybrid delivers up to 52 MPG city per EPA estimates while leasing for just $209–$249/month depending on region. For a driver covering 10,000 miles per year in a car averaging 50 MPG vs. a gas car at 30 MPG, the fuel savings add up to roughly $400–$600 per year (at $3.50/gallon), meaningfully reducing the true effective monthly cost. This makes the Corolla Hybrid one of the best total-value leases available. Note: the Gulf States region price is $249/month with the same deal; the NY region shows $209/month. 💡 Pro Tip: Calculate your break-even vs. the non-hybrid Corolla. If the Hybrid costs $15–$20/month more but saves $35–$50/month in fuel, it pays for itself immediately. Use fueleconomy.gov (the EPA’s official tool) to calculate fuel savings for your specific driving pattern. 52 MPG City $400–$600/yr Fuel Savings TSS 3.0 Standard Regional Price Varies 9 AWD Standard • Best All-Weather Budget Lease Subaru Crosstrek — $235/mo • Effective ~$332/mo $235/month → Effective ~$332/mo after $3,234 at signing ÷ 36 📅 Term: 36 months 💰 At signing: $3,234 🧊 AWD: Standard on all trims 💵 MSRP: ~$25,000 The Subaru Crosstrek is remarkable for one reason that matters enormously in snowy or wet climates: all-wheel drive is standard on every single trim, included in this $235/month lease. For seniors in the Northeast, Midwest, or Pacific Northwest, this is a compelling advantage over front-wheel-drive budget alternatives. The Crosstrek also has notably high ground clearance (8.7 inches) compared to typical sedans, making it easier to enter and exit. Subaru EyeSight safety technology — adaptive cruise control, pre-collision braking, lane centering — is standard on most trims. 💡 Pro Tip: Subaru offers a $500 loyalty discount for returning Subaru lessees in select markets, potentially lowering the effective cost to ~$318/month. Ask your dealer specifically about the “Subaru Owner Loyalty” incentive before finalizing. AWD Standard 8.7” Ground Clearance EyeSight Standard $500 Loyalty Available 10 Compact SUV • Best Feature Set Under $250 Kia Sportage LX FWD — $229/mo • Effective ~$340/mo $229/month → Effective ~$340/mo after $3,999 at signing ÷ 24 📅 Term: 24 months 💰 At signing: $3,999 🌍 Class: Compact SUV 💵 MSRP: $30,285 The Kia Sportage LX delivers a compact SUV with elevated seating, spacious cargo area, and Kia’s full driver assistance suite at one of the lowest effective costs for an SUV in March 2026. The 24-month term means you’re driving a brand-new vehicle more frequently, which suits drivers who prefer minimal maintenance concerns. Higher trims unlock a panoramic sunroof, dual-zone climate control, and heated seats. A plug-in hybrid (PHEV) version of the Sportage is also available at a higher price point but with significant fuel savings. 💡 Pro Tip: A shorter 24-month lease means lower mileage rollover risk if your driving habits are unpredictable. Two years goes quickly; you’re less likely to exceed your mileage allotment and face end-of-lease charges. Compact SUV Elevated Seating 24-Month Term Hybrid Option Available 11 American-Made Compact SUV • Strong Value Chevrolet Equinox — $249/mo • Effective ~$332/mo $249/month → Effective ~$332/mo after $3,839 at signing ÷ 36 📅 Term: 36 months 💰 At signing: $3,839 🌍 Class: Compact SUV 💵 MSRP: $30,795 The 2026 Chevrolet Equinox earns KBB’s recognition for easygoing driving manners and smooth highway performance. Standard safety features include automatic emergency braking, lane keep assist, following distance indicator, and rear pedestrian alert. GM’s OnStar connectivity provides emergency response services — an important safety net for solo drivers. The Equinox is widely available at most dealerships across the country, giving you more dealer competition to negotiate against than rarer models. 💡 Pro Tip: GM’s conquest cash incentive (currently up to $1,500 for non-GM brand lessees) can be applied to reduce the amount due at signing. This effectively lowers the effective monthly cost by $40–$45 per month on a 36-month lease. OnStar Emergency Widely Available 36-Month Term GM Conquest $1,500 12 Best EV Lease Under $300 • 300-Mile Range Chevrolet Equinox EV LT — $259/mo • Effective ~$362/mo $259/month → Effective ~$362/mo after $4,029 at signing ÷ 39 📅 Term: 39 months 💰 At signing: $4,029 ⚡ Range: ~300 miles 💵 MSRP: $41,790 The Chevrolet Equinox EV LT leases for an effective $362/month — just 47% of the $748 average new car purchase payment per Experian data. With approximately 300 miles of range, this fully electric compact SUV eliminates fuel costs entirely for most lessees. At an average of 12,000 miles/year and national average electricity rates, fuel costs run approximately $40–$60/month vs. $120–$180/month for a comparable gas vehicle. Maintenance costs are also dramatically lower (no oil changes, fewer brake replacements due to regenerative braking). The 39-month term is slightly longer than standard — confirm this aligns with your plans. 💡 Pro Tip: EV leases are particularly favorable for budget-conscious drivers because the manufacturer bears the residual risk. If EV values drop further, that’s the leasing company’s problem — not yours. This is why Consumer Reports specifically recommends leasing over buying for EVs. 47% of Avg Car Payment $0 Fuel Monthly 300-Mile Range 39-Month Term No Oil Changes 13 319-Mile Range EV • Award-Winning Design Kia EV6 Light Long Range — $299/mo • Effective ~$410/mo $299/month → Effective ~$410/mo after $3,999 at signing ÷ 36 📅 Term: 36 months 💰 At signing: $3,999 ⚡ Range: 319 miles 💵 MSRP: ~$45,000 The Kia EV6 with 319 miles of range leases for $299/month (California and select markets), making it one of the most range-capable EVs available below $300/month. With ultra-fast 800V charging capability (10–80% in about 18 minutes on a DC fast charger), the EV6 addresses range anxiety more effectively than most EVs. The premium interior, distinctive styling, and comprehensive tech make this an exceptional value at the $299 advertised rate. Kia’s 10-year/100,000-mile powertrain warranty provides an exceptional safety net. 💡 Pro Tip: 800V ultra-fast charging is a significant differentiator. If you road trip occasionally, the EV6’s 18-minute charge time means quick stops vs. 45–60 minutes on standard 400V systems. For seniors who occasionally travel long distances, this removes the primary anxiety about owning or leasing an EV. 319-Mile Range 800V Fast Charging 18-Min 10–80% Charge 10-Year Warranty California + Select Markets 14 288-Mile AWD EV • Lowest Down Payment EV Lease Subaru Solterra Premium — $299/mo • Effective ~$363/mo $299/month → Effective ~$363/mo after $2,799 at signing ÷ 36 📅 Term: 36 months 💰 At signing: $2,799 (lowest EV) ⚡ Range: 288 miles • AWD 💵 MSRP: ~$44,000 The Subaru Solterra stands out for having the lowest amount due at signing of any EV lease deal this month — just $2,799 — making it the most accessible EV lease for those watching upfront costs carefully. AWD is standard, giving all-weather confidence. With $2,799 at signing vs. the Equinox EV’s $4,029 or the EV6’s $3,999, the Solterra requires $1,200–$1,230 less upfront cash. The Solterra is essentially the same vehicle as the Toyota bZ4X (built on the same platform) but at a lower price. Returning Subaru lessees may qualify for an additional $500 loyalty discount, reducing effective cost to approximately $349/month. 💡 Pro Tip: Never put a large down payment on a lease. If the car is totaled or stolen, you lose that money — insurance pays the lessor, not you. The Solterra’s low $2,799 upfront cost is genuinely advantageous, not a shortcoming. Lowest EV Down Payment AWD Standard $500 Loyalty Available 288-Mile Range 15 World Car of the Year • Exceptional Efficiency Hyundai IONIQ 6 SE RWD — ~$356/mo effective ~$199–$249/month → Effective ~$356/mo including signing amount ÷ term 📅 Term: 36 months 💰 At signing: varies by region ⚡ Range: ~240–361 miles 🏆 2023 World Car of the Year CarsDirect identified the Hyundai IONIQ 6 SE RWD Standard Range as “one of the best deals we’re seeing this month” with an effective cost of ~$356/month. The IONIQ 6 is a streamlined, aerodynamic sedan that achieved 101 MPGe combined on its top range configuration — among the most efficient EVs ever tested. It won the 2023 World Car of the Year. The 800V charging architecture (shared with the EV6) enables ultra-fast DC charging. The spacious interior has an exceptionally flat floor (no transmission tunnel), improving passenger access and comfort. 💡 Pro Tip: The IONIQ 6’s streamlined shape reduces wind noise significantly at highway speeds, a feature seniors who prioritize a quiet, comfortable driving experience will appreciate. It was specifically designed to minimize cabin noise. World Car of the Year 101 MPGe 800V Fast Charging Flat Floor Cabin 16 Newly Redesigned • Best Value Southern California Nissan Sentra SV — $329/mo effective (SoCal) ~$279/month → Effective ~$329/mo before taxes & fees (SoCal deal) 📅 Term: 36 months typical 💰 At signing: regional pricing 🚀 New: Redesigned for 2026 💵 MSRP: redesigned pricing The 2026 Nissan Sentra features a full redesign with upgraded technology and styling, yet CarsDirect reports the effective cost to lease is only $14/month more than the outgoing model — making it compelling for shoppers wanting the latest generation. The Southern California deal of $329/month effective before taxes and fees represents strong value for a brand-new vehicle generation. Nissan Safety Shield 360 — including automatic emergency braking, blind spot warning, rear cross traffic alert, and lane departure warning — is standard on the SV trim. Current deals expire March 31, 2026. 💡 Pro Tip: The redesigned generation of any vehicle typically commands less manufacturer incentive support in its first model year. The fact that the 2026 Sentra’s lease cost is only $14/month more than the outgoing model is unusual — Nissan is clearly investing heavily in market share. Newly Redesigned 2026 Safety Shield 360 SoCal Best Pricing Expires March 31 17 Loyal Subaru Owners • Hybrid SUV Under $335 Subaru Forester Premium Hybrid — $332/mo effective $332/month → Effective ~$318–$332/mo with $500 loyalty discount 📅 Term: 36 months 💰 At signing: regional 🧊 AWD: Standard ⛽️ Hybrid powertrain CarsDirect reports the Forester Premium Hybrid at $332/month effective — cheaper than the base Impreza Sport ($349) and only $35/month more than the gas Forester Base despite the hybrid powertrain. This is an unusual situation where the hybrid version is essentially a free upgrade for savvy shoppers. Returning Subaru lessees qualify for an additional $500 loyalty discount, bringing the effective cost as low as $318/month. With Subaru’s standard AWD and EyeSight driver assistance, this is one of the best all-weather, all-season budget hybrid SUV leases available. 💡 Pro Tip: The gas Forester is selling out for the 2025 model year, meaning Subaru is motivated to move Hybrid inventory. End-of-model-year motivation from the manufacturer often translates to better deals for the shopper. Cheaper Than Impreza $500 Loyalty Discount AWD Standard Hybrid MPG Savings 18 Best Truck Lease Under $425 • MSRP $50,000+ Vehicle Jeep Gladiator Sport S — $419/mo effective $419/month effective → Effective ~$419/mo (advertised $319 + $3,949 signing ÷ 36) 📅 Term: 36 months 💰 At signing: $3,949 🚗 Class: Midsize pickup truck 💵 MSRP: ~$45,000+ For seniors who need a truck for towing, hauling, or outdoor activities, the Jeep Gladiator Sport S represents extraordinary lease value: an effective cost of $419/month on a vehicle with an MSRP over $45,000. CarsDirect reports this deal is cheaper than the Jeep Compass Limited despite the Gladiator’s $10,000+ higher sticker price, because manufacturer incentives are much more aggressive. The Gladiator’s body-on-frame construction, 4WD capability, and removable top and doors offer utility and versatility not found in any car at this price point. Currently available in California through March 31. 💡 Pro Tip: If you live in a state other than California, ask your dealer if they can match California regional pricing with dealer-level negotiation. California Jeep prices are often set with aggressive incentives that dealers in other states can sometimes match for qualified buyers. Pickup Truck $45K+ MSRP 4WD Standard Removable Top/Doors California Pricing 19 Full-Size Truck Under $500/mo • $60K MSRP Value RAM 1500 Big Horn 4×4 — $481/mo effective (FCA Loyalists) $481/month effective → Effective ~$481/mo (advertised price incl. $2,000 loyalty ÷ 36) 📅 Term: 36 months 💰 At signing: regional terms 🚗 Class: Full-size pickup truck 💵 MSRP: ~$60,000 CarsDirect identifies the RAM 1500 Big Horn 4×4 Crew Cab as “spectacular deal” for FCA (Stellantis) brand loyalists: an effective cost of $481/month on a full-size truck with an MSRP approaching $60,000. This is the highest payment on this list, but represents exceptional value relative to the vehicle’s class and price. The $2,000 loyalty discount is only available if you are currently in or recently finished leasing a Dodge, Jeep, RAM, or Chrysler vehicle. For seniors who need maximum towing capacity and truck utility, this is the best full-size truck lease available in March 2026. 💡 Pro Tip: If you don’t have FCA loyalty status, the RAM 1500 is still available at a somewhat higher price. The V6 Big Horn and Lone Star trims offer the best deals; avoid the EcoDiesel and V8 if budget is the primary concern. FCA Loyalty Required Full-Size 4×4 $60K MSRP $2,000 Loyalty Discount 20 Electric Full-Size Truck • Vehicle-to-Home Power Capability Ford F-150 Lightning XLT — $299/mo advertised • Effective ~$490/mo $299/month → Effective ~$490/mo after $6,999 at signing ÷ 36 📅 Term: 36 months 💰 At signing: $6,999 (high) ⚡ Electric full-size truck 🏠 V2H: Vehicle-to-home power The Ford F-150 Lightning’s $299/month advertised price requires $6,999 at signing, producing an effective monthly cost of approximately $490 — the highest effective cost on this list, but still significantly less than the $970/month average that Americans pay to finance a gasoline F-150, per Electrek’s March 2026 analysis. The Lightning’s Vehicle-to-Home (V2H) capability can power a home during outages — a feature that proved its value during Texas’ 2021 ice storm. Note: this deal requires forgoing the free Ford Level 2 home charger normally included with the Lightning purchase. 💡 Pro Tip: The $6,999 upfront cost is high — but remember, you never put large amounts down on a lease if you can avoid it. Negotiate to reduce the signing amount by accepting a slightly higher monthly payment, keeping more cash in your hands. Electric Full-Size Truck Vehicle-to-Home Power Half of Gas F-150 Payment High Down Payment Home Charger Optional Sources: U.S. News March 9 2026 ($189–$481/mo range; Kia Sportage PHEV $189; cheapest deals by payment); CarsDirect best lease deals March 2026 (Jetta $199 effective $296; Elantra $209 effective $306; Sentra SV $329 effective SoCal; Gladiator $419 effective; RAM 1500 $481 effective; Forester Hybrid $332 effective; conquest vs loyalty analysis); KBB 10 best ~$200 deals March 2026 (Mazda3 $199/$3,499/36mo; Kia K4 $209/$3,499/36mo; Civic $209/$3,839/36mo; Sportage $229/$3,999/24mo; Corolla $229/$2,999/36mo; Equinox $249/$3,839/36mo; Encore GX $199/$4,249/24mo conquest); CARFAX 10 cheapest March 2026 (Toyota, Kia, Honda, Hyundai, Mazda, Subaru, Chevy); Electrek March 13 2026 (Equinox EV $259/$4,029/39mo effective $362; EV6 $299/$3,999/36mo effective $410; Solterra $299/$2,799/36mo effective $363; Lightning $299/$6,999/36mo effective $490; national avg $748 financed new; gas F-150 $970/mo avg); CarsDirect cheapest cars to lease (IONIQ 6 SE ~$356/mo effective); Edmunds March 2026 (updated weekly; current top deals ranked by value); LendingTree/Experian Q3 2025 (new lease avg $596; super-prime $592; subprime $624; avg lease term 35.2 months); Consumer Reports (EV $7,500 credit expired Sept 30 2025; Corolla Hybrid; Honda Sensing standard; lease vs buy) 📊 Car Leasing by the Numbers — What the Data Shows 📈 Average New Car Purchase Payment $748/mo Average monthly payment for a new financed vehicle in Q3 2025, per Experian State of the Automotive Finance Market. Up 1.8% year-over-year. More than 20% of buyers pay over $1,000/month, per Edmunds/Electrek March 2026. ✅ Average New Lease Payment $596/mo Average monthly lease payment in Q3 2025 per Experian — $152/month or 20% less than the average new car loan payment. The best lease deals in March 2026 start at effective costs of $290–$320/month, roughly 40–56% below the average purchase payment. 🚗 Avg New Car Transaction Price $49,000+ Average new car transaction price exceeded $49,000 in August 2025 per Consumer Reports, making it increasingly difficult for budget buyers to find affordable vehicles to purchase. Leasing circumvents this by financing only the depreciation rather than the full purchase price. ⚡ EV Lease Share 50%+ Over 50% of EV drivers chose to lease in 2024, up from 30.7% in 2023, per Experian data cited by Consumer Reports. EV leases are particularly advantageous because depreciation risk remains with the manufacturer, not the driver, making EVs one of the best categories to lease rather than buy. 💡 The Most Important Rule in Car Leasing: Never Compare Monthly Payments Alone Two deals that both advertise “$199/month” can have radically different actual costs. The VW Jetta at $199/month requires $4,249 at signing for a 24-month term — effective cost $376/month. The Mazda3 at $199/month requires $3,499 at signing for a 36-month term — effective cost $296/month. The Mazda3 is $80/month cheaper even though both advertise the same payment. Always calculate: (monthly payment × term) + signing amount, then divide by term months. This is the only honest comparison method, and it is what CarsDirect, CARFAX, and Edmunds use in their deal rankings. Sources: Experian State of the Automotive Finance Market Q3 2025 (LendingTree Dec 2025; $748 new avg; $596 lease avg; up 1.8%/1.9% YoY; super-prime $592; subprime $624; avg lease term 35.2 months); Consumer Reports 2026 ($49,000+ avg transaction price Aug 2025; EV lease 50%+ share 2024); Edmunds/Electrek March 13 2026 (20%+ buyers over $1,000/mo); CarsDirect effective cost methodology (total cost ÷ term months) 📋 Lease vs. Buy — Side-by-Side Comparison Based on Consumer Reports, Bankrate, and CarEdge analysis of leasing vs. financing a comparable vehicle in 2026. Individual results vary based on credit score, vehicle choice, and usage patterns. Factor Leasing Buying (Finance) Better For Budget? Monthly paymentLower ($596 avg)Higher ($748 avg)Lease Down payment requiredLower (first mo + fees)Higher (10–20% typical)Lease Long-term total costHigher (never own)Lower (pay off + keep)Buy Repair costsLower (under warranty)Higher (after warranty)Lease Flexibility to sell/tradeNone during termAnytimeBuy Mileage freedomRestricted (10–15K/yr)UnlimitedBuy CustomizationNone (must return as-is)UnlimitedBuy Low-mileage driversSavings on unused milesNo benefitLease Safety tech updatesNew car every 2–3 yrsAges with vehicleLease Credit score impactSimilar to loanSimilar to leaseEqual Sources: Consumer Reports lease vs buy 2026 (never own; always-on payments; repairs under warranty; customization restrictions; flexibility); Bankrate Dec 2025 (Camry 36-mo lease $538/mo vs buy $861/mo; monthly comparison); Experian Q3 2025 (avg payments); FTC consumer.ftc.gov (financing guide; add-ons; rights); CarEdge 2026 (long-term ownership more economical; lease cycle cost structure) ❓ Car Leasing Questions Answered Plainly 💡 I’m on a Fixed Income. Is It Even Possible to Get Approved for a Lease? Yes — income type matters less than income stability and credit score. Lenders look for consistent, documentable income sufficient to cover the monthly payment — Social Security, pension, and retirement account distributions all qualify. Most lenders require a debt-to-income ratio (DTI) below 40–50%. If your lease payment would be $300/month and your total monthly debt obligations (including rent/mortgage, existing loans, etc.) plus the new payment are under 50% of gross monthly income, you are likely to be approved. Key steps for fixed-income applicants: (1) Check your credit report free at AnnualCreditReport.com before visiting a dealer per FTC advice. (2) Get pre-qualified through a credit union or bank before visiting a dealer — this gives you leverage. (3) Bring documentation of all income sources, including Social Security award letters and recent bank statements showing consistent deposits. (4) Consider a shorter-term lease (24 months) or a lower-price vehicle to stay well within your DTI comfort zone. 💡 What Happens If I Need to Get Out of a Lease Early? Early lease termination is one of the most expensive things you can do in automotive finance. Most leases charge the remaining payments plus an early termination fee — this can easily total $3,000–$8,000 depending on how early you terminate. Better alternatives to termination: (1) Lease transfer: Websites like Swapalease.com and LeaseTrader.com allow you to transfer your remaining lease to another person who takes over payments. Many manufacturers allow this with a transfer fee ($50–$300) vs. paying out all remaining months. (2) Trade it in: If your car has positive equity (market value exceeds the remaining payoff), a dealer can buy out the lease and apply the equity to your next vehicle. This was common during 2021–2023 when used car prices were elevated. (3) Roll into a new lease: Some manufacturers will waive remaining payments (up to 3–5 months) when you roll into a new lease with the same brand. This is often called an “early pull-ahead” program. Never stop making payments; that results in repossession and severe credit damage. 💡 Should I Buy My Leased Car at the End or Turn It In? It depends on the residual price vs. current market value. At lease end, you have the option to buy the car at the pre-set residual value. When buying makes sense: If the market value of your car (check Kelley Blue Book at kbb.com or Edmunds.com) is higher than the residual price, you have built-in equity — buy it and either keep it or sell it for a profit. When returning makes sense: If the residual price equals or exceeds market value, return it. You’d be overpaying to buy a depreciating asset. What to do 90 days before lease end: (1) Check kbb.com and edmunds.com for your car’s market value — enter the exact year, model, mileage, and condition. (2) Compare to the residual value on your lease agreement. (3) Get a pre-return inspection through the manufacturer’s program (typically free at 90 days out) to know exactly what wear-and-tear charges you’ll face. (4) Get a competing buyout offer from CarMax or a local used dealer before accepting the manufacturer’s buyout terms — some brands allow third-party buyouts. 💡 What Are “Dealer Fees” and Which Can I Refuse? Per FTC guidance at consumer.ftc.gov, many dealer fees are negotiable or can simply be declined. Fees you typically cannot avoid: acquisition fee (set by the lending bank, typically $595–$995), title and registration fees, state and local taxes, and dealer documentation fee (varies by state, some are legally capped). Fees you can refuse or negotiate: extended warranties (never required, can be purchased later at most manufacturers), paint sealant and interior protection packages (dealer-added, often marked up 500%), nitrogen tire filling (air is free; this is profit, not value), gap coverage (often available cheaper through your own insurance company or credit union), and “dealer prep” fees beyond standard documentation. The FTC specifically states that add-ons are not free and it is not okay for dealers to tuck add-ons into your deal without disclosure. A key tactic per FTC advice: get the complete “out-the-door price” — meaning total price including all fees and taxes — in writing via email before setting foot in the dealership. 💡 I Drive Very Few Miles (Under 8,000/year). How Does Leasing Work Best for Me? Low-mileage drivers have a significant advantage in leasing that most people miss. Negotiate a reduced mileage lease: Standard leases offer 10,000 or 12,000 miles/year. If you drive 7,000–8,000 miles/year, ask specifically for a 7,500 or 8,000 miles/year lease. Because lower annual mileage means less depreciation, the monthly payment is lower. A 10,000-mile lease on a Toyota Corolla might be $229/month; a 7,500-mile lease could be $15–$25/month less. Over 36 months, that saves $540–$900. Do not purchase extra miles you won’t use: Unused miles earn nothing at lease end. If you consistently drive 8,000 miles on a 12,000-mile lease, you are paying for 4,000 miles of capacity every year that you never receive value from. Track your actual annual mileage for 2–3 months before signing a lease to estimate accurately. If life changes mid-lease, contact your lessor immediately — you may be able to negotiate additional miles upfront at a lower per-mile rate than paying after-the-fact overage charges. 💡 Are There Any Special Leasing Programs for Seniors or People on Fixed Incomes? There are no federal programs specifically for seniors that reduce car lease costs. However, several practical strategies work especially well for seniors and fixed-income drivers: Military/USAA discounts: Veterans and active military often qualify for exclusive dealer discounts and lower money factors through USAA-affiliated programs and manufacturer military incentive programs. Credit union lease rates: Many credit unions offer lease financing at lower money factors than manufacturer-captive rates. Joining a local credit union specifically for auto leasing can reduce effective monthly costs. Employee pricing events: Manufacturer employee pricing sales (typically held in summer) allow any customer to lease at employee cost — among the lowest prices of the year. End-of-model-year clearance: August–October typically sees the most aggressive lease deals on outgoing model years as manufacturers clear inventory. CarFit program: The CarFit program (mentioned by AARP) helps seniors identify which vehicles fit their mobility needs best before leasing — preventing costly mistakes of leasing the wrong vehicle type. Find events at car-fit.org. Sources: FTC consumer.ftc.gov (get out-the-door in writing; add-ons not required; AnnualCreditReport.com; documentation fees by state; co-signer responsibilities); Consumer Reports 2026 (early termination costs; lease flexibility; Swapalease/LeaseTrader; pull-ahead programs; residual vs market value); CarEdge 2026 (money factor markup; loyalty/conquest cash; lease transfer options); Bankrate Dec 2025 (DTI calculation; fixed income qualification; Social Security as qualifying income); AARP buy or lease retiree guide 2025 (CarFit program; fixed income leasing strategies); Experian Q3 2025 (credit score impact on lease payment; 700+ for advertised subvented deals); car-fit.org (CarFit program for seniors) 📍 Find Car Dealerships & Lease Deals Near You Use the buttons below to locate dealerships near you for the specific brands with the best lease deals this month. Always check the manufacturer’s national website for current advertised deals before visiting, and compare effective monthly costs using the formula: total payments + down payment ÷ term months. 🚗 Toyota Dealers — Corolla & Corolla Hybrid Leases 🚗 Kia & Hyundai Dealers — K4 / Elantra / IONIQ Leases 🚗 Honda & Mazda Dealers — Civic & Mazda3 Leases 🚗 Subaru Dealers — Crosstrek & Forester Hybrid Leases ⚡ Chevy & Buick Dealers — Equinox EV & Encore GX 🚗 VW & Nissan Dealers — Jetta & Sentra Leases Finding dealerships near you… ✅ Five Steps to Get the Best Lease Deal Right Now Step 1: Calculate the effective monthly cost of every deal you consider. Take (monthly payment × term months) + amount due at signing, then divide by term months. This is the real cost of the lease. Never compare two deals based only on the advertised monthly payment. A $199/month deal requiring $4,999 down is often more expensive than a $249/month deal requiring $1,999 down. Step 2: Check the manufacturer’s national website for this month’s published incentives before visiting a dealer. Go to toyota.com/deals, kia.com/offers, hyundaiusa.com/offers, honda.com, mazdausa.com, or the relevant manufacturer site and note the exact advertised deal for your region. This is your baseline — dealers must honor published manufacturer offers and cannot charge more for the subsidized rate on a subvented deal. Step 3: Get the out-the-door price in writing via email or text before your dealership visit. Per FTC consumer guidance at consumer.ftc.gov, always request the complete out-the-door price in writing before visiting the lot. This protects you from in-person pressure to add fees, packages, and add-ons that were not disclosed in advance. A dealer who refuses to provide this is a red flag. Step 4: Look up the published money factor at Edmunds.com or leasehackr.com before signing. The money factor determines your lease’s interest cost. If the dealer quotes a money factor higher than the published buy rate, ask them to reduce it. A 50-basis-point markup on a money factor can cost $15–$25/month on a typical compact car lease — $540–$900 over 36 months. Step 5: Ask about loyalty, conquest, and pull-ahead incentives at the end of your negotiation. Never mention these during initial price negotiation — get the base price locked first, then ask: “Am I eligible for any loyalty, conquest, or pull-ahead cash on top of this?” These incentives can reduce your down payment or monthly cost by $500–$2,000 without affecting the rest of the deal structure. ⚠️ Three Lease Mistakes That Cost Seniors the Most Money Making a large down payment (cap cost reduction) on a lease. This is the single most common and costly lease mistake. If your leased vehicle is totaled or stolen, GAP insurance pays the leasing company — your down payment is gone. Put the minimum required at signing and keep the rest in an accessible savings account. On a 36-month lease, a $3,000 cap cost reduction saves you only $83/month — but that same $3,000 stays in your bank account if you don’t put it down. Leasing based on the monthly payment without understanding total costs. The monthly payment is the most manipulated number in automotive retail. Dealers can lower it by extending the term, increasing the down payment, or raising the vehicle’s cap cost while adding backend profit in ways that aren’t immediately visible. Always calculate the effective monthly cost as described above. A slightly higher monthly payment on a shorter term is often less expensive overall. Ignoring excess mileage risk until it’s too late. If you drive more than your annual mileage allowance, you pay 10–50 cents per extra mile at lease end. On a 10,000-mile lease, driving 14,000 miles/year results in a $1,600–$8,000 surprise bill at lease end. Either track your mileage from month one, or negotiate additional miles upfront at the start of the lease — per-mile rates negotiated at signing (typically $0.05–$0.10) are far cheaper than paying excess mileage charges at the end ($0.25–$0.50). © BudgetSeniors.com — This guide is independently researched and written. We are not affiliated with, compensated by, or endorsed by any automobile manufacturer, dealership, or financial institution. All lease pricing information is based on publicly available manufacturer incentive data from Edmunds, KBB, CarsDirect, CARFAX, U.S. News, and Electrek as of March 9–13, 2026. Lease deals are subject to change and expire; most offers listed end March 31, 2026. Contact your local authorized dealership to confirm current pricing, availability, and eligibility in your region. Prices exclude tax, title, license, dealer fees, and optional add-ons unless otherwise noted. This is not financial or legal advice — consult a financial advisor before making major vehicle decisions. 🌐 Check current deals: edmunds.com/lease-deals • kbb.com/best-cars/best-lease-deals-under-200 • carsdirect.com/deals-articles/best-lease-deals • FTC guidance: consumer.ftc.gov • Free credit report: AnnualCreditReport.com • Money factor lookup: edmunds.com or leasehackr.com Primary sources: U.S. News March 9 2026 (usnews.com; cheapest deals $189–$481/mo; Kia, Toyota, Subaru featured); CarsDirect best lease deals March 2026 (carsdirect.com; Jetta $199; Elantra $209; Sentra $329; Forester Hybrid $332; Gladiator $419; RAM 1500 $481; conquest vs loyalty analysis; model-year clearance strategy); KBB 10 best ~$200 deals March 2026 (kbb.com; Mazda3 $199/$3,499/36mo; Kia K4 $209/$3,499/36mo; Civic $209/$3,839/36mo; Sportage $229/$3,999/24mo; Corolla $229/$2,999/36mo; Equinox $249/$3,839/36mo; Encore GX $199/$4,249/24mo conquest); CARFAX 10 cheapest March 2026 (carfax.com; Toyota/Kia/Honda/Hyundai/Mazda/Subaru/Chevy effective cost methodology); Edmunds lease deals March 2026 (edmunds.com; updated frequently; value vs payment ranking; money factor lookup); Electrek March 13 2026 (EV lease deals; Equinox EV $259/$4,029/39mo effective $362; EV6 $299/$3,999/36mo; Solterra $299/$2,799/36mo effective $363; Lightning $299/$6,999/36mo effective $490; national avg $748; gas F-150 $970/mo avg); CarsDirect cheapest cars to lease (IONIQ 6 ~$356/mo effective); LendingTree/Experian Q3 2025 (lendingtree.com; new avg $748 up 1.8%; lease avg $596 up 1.9%; avg term 35.2 months; super-prime $592; subprime $624; delinquency rates); Consumer Reports lease vs buy 2026 (consumerreports.org; long-term buying cheaper; early term costs; repair savings; EV lease 50%+ of EV drivers 2024; $7,500 credit expired Sept 30 2025; $49,000+ avg transaction Aug 2025); FTC consumer.ftc.gov (out-the-door price in writing; add-ons optional; AnnualCreditReport.com; co-signer); Bankrate Dec 2025 (Camry lease $538 vs buy $861; 36-mo comparison; DTI calculation); CarEdge 2026 (caredge.com; money factor markup 50–100 bp; loyalty/conquest $500–$2,000; cap cost reduction risk; lease transfer Swapalease LeaseTrader); AARP buy or lease retirees (aarp.org Feb 2025; CarFit program car-fit.org) Recommended Reads Switching to Verizon Specials Is Youtube TV Offering Any Specials? 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