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Auto Loans guide

Lease Buyout Loans

When buying out your lease is worth the rate hit.

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By Avery Cole, Editor-in-Chief

Last updated:

How we rate

What this guide covers

This guide walks through lease buyout loans from first principles. We explain how lenders price auto loans, what underwriting actually checks, and how to compare offers side-by-side so the lender you pick is the one your situation actually fits.

How rates are set

Lenders quote a rate based on three inputs: a market benchmark (the 10-year Treasury for mortgages; the federal funds rate for revolving credit), the lender's operating margin, and your individual risk profile. The benchmark moves with the broader economy; the margin varies by lender; the risk profile is what you can actually influence.

What underwriting checks

  • Credit score and credit history depth
  • Debt-to-income ratio
  • Stable income with at least 2 years of history
  • Asset reserves (months of payments held in liquid accounts)
  • Property or loan-purpose specifics (for secured loans)

How to compare offers

APR is the headline number, but it isn't the whole story. Origination fees, lender credits, rate-lock policies, and funding speed all matter. The comparison tables on this site normalise the columns that move the most — but always read each lender's loan estimate side-by-side before committing.

Next steps

Pre-qualify with three or four lenders to get real, comparable offers. Pre-qualification uses a soft credit pull, so it doesn't affect your score. Once you have offers in hand, the choice is usually clearer than the marketing copy suggests.

Frequently asked questions

  • How current is this guide?
    Last updated May 14, 2026.