Leasing has swiftly taken over the electric-vehicle market. Nearly 80% of new EVs bought at dealerships are now leased, according to Edmunds data cited by The Wall Street Journal.

That’s up from 16% at the beginning of last year, per Edmunds. And it’s at least triple the industry average, which sits around 20%. One caveat: since we’re talking about EVs bought at dealerships, these figures exclude direct-to-consumer EV makers like Rivian, Lucid and (most importantly) Tesla. Tesla tends to push leases less than many conventional brands, too. Since it makes the three best-selling EVs on sale, the full-market figure is likely considerably less than 80%.

Still, the rise of leasing is among the strangest dynamics in today’s EV market, and the long-term impacts could be immense.

  • Clay_pidgin
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    21 hours ago

    Which EVs are the least anti-consumer at the moment? I want into the club, but I hate telemetry and subscriptions and those stupid touchscreens. Really what I want is an electric 20 year old civic; just a car to do car stuff.

    • MyOpinion@lemm.eeOP
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      21 hours ago

      If you want something like that, you will have to go back to an original Leaf which has no range.

      • Clay_pidgin
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        21 hours ago

        That’s disappointing. Oh well, I guess I’ll just keep my current car out of the landfill.

        • Sentau@discuss.tchncs.de
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          18 hours ago

          If I remember correctly, the gen 1 kona electric had no inbuilt internet connectivity (atleast in the Indian model). Maybe you can see if that is true for your region