Car Loan vs Lease vs Cash — What Actually Makes Sense in India
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Car Loan vs Lease vs Cash — What Actually Makes Sense in India

Last verified: April 2026, against major bank car loan rate cards, ALD Automotive / Mahindra Finance lease structures, and current GST + road tax norms across major states.

You’re buying a ₹10 lakh car. The dealer offers three options: 8.95% car loan, “all-inclusive lease” at ₹22,000/month, or pay full cash and walk out. Most buyers default to the loan because it feels normal. But the all-in cost varies by ₹1.5-2 lakh between options for the same car, and the right choice depends on three things almost no one calculates: depreciation, tax bracket, and whether the car is in your name or your employer’s.

The headline comparison — ₹10 L on-road price, 4-year ownership

Option Effective annual cost Total 4-year cost Resale at year 4 Net cost of ownership
Cash purchase ₹10 L upfront + ₹3 L running costs ~₹4.5 L ~₹8.5 L
Car loan @ 9%, 60 months ~₹2.5 L EMI ~₹12.45 L EMI total + ₹3 L running ~₹4.5 L ~₹10.95 L
Operating lease (corporate, monthly all-inclusive) ~₹2.6-2.9 L ~₹11 L lease + minimal running ₹0 (return car) ~₹11 L
Lease (salary-sacrifice, perquisite-tax structure) ~₹1.7-2.1 L (post-tax) ~₹7-8 L post-tax ₹0 (return / buy out) ~₹7-8 L

The first three are straightforward — the fourth (employer-provided lease via salary sacrifice) is where the surprises live.

Cash purchase — the obvious base case

You pay ₹10 L on day 1. You own the car. There’s no interest, no monthly EMI burden, no foreclosure complexity. At year 4 you can sell for ~₹4.5 L (typical 55% depreciation in 4 years for mass-market cars).

Pros: Cheapest in absolute rupees. Mental peace. No paperwork beyond initial RC and insurance.

Cons: Opportunity cost. ₹10 L invested at 12% equity return for 4 years compounds to ~₹15.7 L. So the “real” cost of paying cash is ₹10 L + ₹5.7 L of forgone returns — call it ₹15.7 L. This nullifies the no-interest advantage if you’re a competent investor with positive expected returns elsewhere.

Decision rule: Pay cash only if you have no high-yield deployment for the money. If your alternative is a 7% FD, the opportunity cost is small. If your alternative is consistent equity SIP, opportunity cost is large.

Car loan — the standard middle path

Banks lend up to 85-90% of on-road price. Tenure 12-84 months (most pick 60). Rate currently 8.5-9.5% APR for tier-1 banks. Processing fee 0.5-1%. Foreclosure charges 2-4% (some banks waive after 12 months).

Effective cost on ₹10 L / 60 months / 9% APR:

  • EMI: ₹20,758
  • Total payments: ₹12,45,500
  • Total interest: ₹2,45,500

The ₹2.45 L interest is the explicit cost of using someone else’s money. But you’ve kept ₹10 L cash deployable. If you SIP that ₹10 L over the same 5 years (versus paying cash), the SIP corpus at 12% CAGR is ~₹17.6 L — versus ₹13.7 L if you’d put ₹20,758/month into the SIP starting empty.

Net effect of the loan vs cash: keeping ₹10 L invested while paying ~₹20K/month creates ~₹4 L more wealth over 5 years if you actually invest the difference. If you just spend the freed cash on lifestyle — the loan loses.

Tax angle: No deduction for personal car loan interest. Self-employed using the car for business can claim car expense + interest as business expense.

Operating lease — the corporate-only option

Operating lease (sometimes called “car-as-a-service”) is essentially a long-term rental: you pay a monthly fee that covers depreciation + interest + maintenance + insurance + roadside assistance. At end of term (3-4 years), you return the car.

Operating leases are widely used by companies for employees. Two flavours:

Flavour A — direct corporate lease (employer pays)

Employer leases the car, employee uses it. The lease cost is part of CTC. Treated as taxable perquisite at notional rates (₹1,800-2,400/month for most cars). For an employee in 30% slab, perquisite tax on a ₹10 L car is ~₹720-960/month — much less than the actual lease rate.

Effective annual cost to employee at 30% slab: ~₹8,640-11,520. Compare to ~₹2.5 L for owning the same car. Massively favourable to employee — pure perk.

Flavour B — salary sacrifice / employee-owned lease

Employer routes a portion of your CTC into a lease company (ALD, Mahindra, LeasePlan, etc.). Lease cost reduces taxable salary. You drive the car. At end of lease, you can buy it out at residual value (typically 25-35% of original).

For a ₹10 L car on 4-year salary-sacrifice lease at ~₹22,000/month total cost (lease + maintenance):

  • Annual lease cost: ₹2.64 L (pre-tax)
  • Tax saved at 30% slab + cess: ~₹82,400/year
  • Net effective annual cost: ₹1.82 L
  • 4-year net effective cost: ~₹7.27 L
  • Plus residual buyout (optional): ₹2.5-3.5 L

If you buy out at year 4 and sell at year 6 for ~₹3 L, your total effective cost across 6 years is ~₹7.27 L + ₹3 L − ₹3 L = ~₹7.27 L for what was a ₹10 L car. Compared to ~₹8.5 L for cash purchase or ~₹11 L for car loan.

Salary-sacrifice lease wins by ₹1.5-3 L vs car loan, primarily because of the tax shield.

Catch: Available only to salaried employees whose employer has tied up with a lease provider. New-regime employees don’t get the salary deduction (perquisite-only structure). Self-employed and most non-corporate employees can’t access this.

Direct retail lease (non-corporate) — generally bad value

A handful of car-as-a-service providers (Revv, Drive India, etc.) offer monthly leases to individuals. Effective rates work out to 18-25% APR equivalent — significantly worse than a normal car loan. Useful only for:

  • People who change cars every 2-3 years and value zero residual-value risk
  • People who can’t get a car loan due to credit history
  • NRIs / expatriates on temporary postings

For a long-term Indian buyer, direct retail lease almost never wins on TCO.

The depreciation trap

Every car loses ~15-20% in year 1, ~10-12% per year thereafter. Mass-market sedans/SUVs typically retain 45-50% of original value at year 4, 25-30% at year 8. Premium cars depreciate faster (40-45% at year 4); luxury cars worse still.

This is the silent cost everyone underestimates. A ₹10 L car held for 5 years and sold for ₹4 L means the “use” cost was ₹6 L plus running costs (₹3-4 L over 5 years) — ₹9-10 L for 5 years of mobility, or ₹15,000-17,000/month flat. Most owners don’t think of it this way and feel “free” once the loan ends.

Implication: If you’ll switch cars every 3-4 years anyway, lease structures (which charge you for depreciation explicitly) are honest about the real cost. If you’ll hold a car 8-10 years, ownership wins because you stretch depreciation over more years of use.

Five mistakes that cost real money

  1. 0% finance schemes. Almost always have a higher list price baked in. Compare total cost vs cash discount, not vs MRP.
  2. Top-up insurance via dealer. Dealer-bundled comprehensive insurance is typically 15-20% costlier than open-market quotes. Buy the basic mandatory cover from the dealer (RTO needs it for registration) and switch at first renewal.
  3. 5-year EMI for a 4-year-use car. If you’ll sell at year 3-4, you’re prepaying interest on a depreciating asset. Match loan tenure to ownership horizon.
  4. Ignoring tax angle on company lease. If your employer offers salary-sacrifice lease, doing the math properly often shows it beats a car loan by ₹50K-1.5 L per year. See take-home calculator for the underlying mechanics.
  5. Buying more car than the budget supports. The “20-4-10” rule: down payment 20%+, loan tenure 4 years or less, total transport cost (EMI + insurance + fuel + maintenance) under 10% of monthly income. Above this, the car becomes a wealth-destroying asset.

Linked deep-dives

FAQs

Is a car loan tax-deductible?

For salaried employees using the car personally — no. For self-employed using the car for business — yes, both interest and depreciation can be claimed as business expenses (proportional to business use).

What’s the difference between operating lease and finance lease?

Operating lease = pure rental, return car at end. Finance lease = lease with option to own at end (residual buyout). In Indian car-as-a-service, most retail offerings are finance leases.

Can I prepay a car loan?

Yes. Prepayment charges typically 2-4% of outstanding (waived by some banks after 12 months). With car loans at 9%, prepayment vs SIP is similar to home loan prepay vs invest math — equity SIPs at 12% expected return usually win, but the gap is narrower because the rate is lower.

Should I pay full down-payment or take a high loan?

Banks finance 85-90% of on-road price. Putting down 20-25% reduces loan-to-value and gets you better rate; putting down minimum keeps cash for investments. With current 9% car loan rates and 12% expected equity return, lower down-payment + larger loan + invest the saved cash is the wealth-maximising play — assuming you actually invest it.

What about EVs — different math?

EVs depreciate faster (battery degradation concerns, fast model evolution). 4-year residual values for current EVs run 35-45% versus 50-55% for ICE equivalents. Lease structures are more attractive for EVs because someone else absorbs the residual-value risk.

Is buying a used car better economics?

Almost always. A 3-year-old car at 50% original price has ~70% of its useful life remaining. Used-car loan rates are higher (12-14%) but on a smaller principal — total interest is lower. Best deal in Indian car ownership: certified used premium car (Audi/BMW/Mercedes 3-year-old).

Sources & references

  • Major bank car loan rate cards (SBI, HDFC, ICICI, Kotak) — April 2026
  • ALD Automotive India and Mahindra Finance lease structures
  • OLX Auto / Cars24 / Spinny depreciation curves (2020-2026 data)
  • Income Tax Rules — perquisite valuation for company-provided cars

Last verified: April 2026. Car loan and lease rates change with macro conditions; we re-verify quarterly.

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