What's more scary is if you look at what they cost new . My mates iPace cost £79k new and he paid £39k for it at 2 years old with 6000 miles on the clock. Before he got it he asked for a battery health check and they found one dud cell. Jaguar authorised a new battery under warranty at a retail cost of £30k (thats what the dealer said it cost) before he picked it up.
Battery packs are just less than $110 per kWh, so that's £100 per kWh, so unless the iPace has a 300kWh battery the dealer is doing what dealers do, telling lies.
@@MrDuncl that story is bunkum, it's the price he insurance company gave, not the manufacturer, in reality it's half that. Model S battery is ~ £17K out of warranty (which is 120K miles, longer than most cars go in their life time)
Having wanted an EV for a while but keeping to a tight budget..... I leased a new Citroën E-C4 for £265/mth. Buying new would have cost £540/mth. The 2 year lease allows me to see if I like it whist not being "stuck with it"... Its is actually a nice car and costs approx £20/mth in electric. Far cheaper than our £150/mth in diesel. As soon as the 2 years are up I will have thrown away a few thousand on a car which is not mine, but I have had the use of a car at far less than £540/mth + devaluation!! I can then with a clear mind buy a used EV at a great price and I will get the exact model that works for my family. For me that is a win-win and not a "stuck with a worthless negative equity car".
Totally agree with your choice ,gives you a taste of ev for a limited time to make your minds d up whether it suits your lifestyle and no depreciation to be concerned about and at the lease price it is fantastic .great choice and things may be different in 2 years time good or bad then you can reassess your choices
@graemeglass7566 Yes I tested the Renault. Nice fit & finish... decent power & range. I found I hit my head on the roofline getting in and out and thought it was just a little small. However, definitely interested to see the new MPV Scenic version... when it's out and about. 👍
I have a Mokka e and very happy with it. It’s a lovely car, all mod cons and no issues after 16,000 miles. Bought it 18 months ago when Government Grant was still available. I’m also glad that secondhand cars have come down in price even though I’ll be hit when I come to trade mine in. Not sure why Electrifying are so anti Vauxhall.
Misleading conversation Ginny and Tom. Although captioned as such, the prices are TRADE values and NOT available to the general public. You both suggest that they might be. Us mere mortals need to add 25% for independant dealer sticker prices and 30 - 40% for cars from main dealers.
@@ksawinter I've checked them all on Autotrader and main and independant dealer websites and no cars are advertised for sale at these trade prices. That's why they are called trade prices unfortunately. I wish they were!
@@allomony4010 There are similar dealer mark-ups on 12 month old petrol or diesel cars though. Buy any car new for the full list price and sell it back to the dealer a year later with 10k miles on it and you'll only get around 60% of what you paid for it. That's not unique to EVs unfortunately.
I found a half year old Demo 2019 Peugeot 208HDI, with all the luxury items to imagine (Model change), and I suppose it will easily last my final driving time as now 76? It drives normally well past 26 km/l on a full tank Diesel and it takes 5 minutes to Charge, sorry - fill the tank, at any time, for up to 1200 km range! And with all the filters and gadgets for driving in Centers of towns also, as Lorries. I used large Electric forklifts during my working years, so I will never, ever buy an EV.
It’s an interesting video for sure…but have you actually looked at real world prices via auto trader etc? These prices you’re quoting are trade-in prices to dealers like webuyanycar etc. Yes they want your EV for silly money…but you aren’t buying them at that money. 23 plate EQC with 5k miles - £39500. Corsa-E with 6k miles £18k. Not seeing anything close to those cap trade prices….so it’s still higher to buy than this video suggests.
@user-yf4fw9jk2q obviously so yes but I doubt anyone is gearing up for selling their cars at trade prices. Certainly dealers won't be. I guess some folks who think webuyanycar offer good rates might...
@@bigstugti you see that moment that you've driven on to the forecourt and the salesman comes over to opine on the value of your trade-in... that's when you're going to be hearing these prices quoted to you, after a long suck of the teeth and "dear oh dear, you didn't buy one of these did you?" whilst you recall just how enthusiastic the (probably) same salesman was when he was selling it to you...
My Cupra Born has dropped almost half it's value in just over a year, cost 38500 now valued between 20000 and 21500 .... I'm stuck now with this car for 3 more years unless I bite the bullet and absorb the loss if I want a change, very disappointed.
Just looked on one of the other bloggers, and it’s not just electric cars that are in free fall, it’s all cars. The hike of prices due to the lack of microchips etc has come back to roost, particularly with everyone tightening the purse strings.
The ev motoring press should have been issuing health warnings 18+ months ago with the ridiculous ev pricing that was going on. Some people who paid cash will have been savaged sadly.
EV prices need to come down. lower prices mean more affordable for the masses and ultimately the transition away from ice. EV owners SHOULD lose money, how else are you going to finance affordable used prices?
Yes they should. They have to. I just feel sorry for the cash paying early adopters losing crazy £££ after believing they were in the new norm post covid.
@@tonyfeasby1437 car buyers have made money 2021-2023. in Germany people bought and sold EVs with profit. that has hurt the used market. losing money when selling a used car should be the norm, i really don't see anything crazy about it. being able to afford ev experience years before everyone else also has its advantages.
A mate of mine paid £120k for a Porsche Taycan 2 years ago new from Porsche. He’s just tried to trade it in for a new Porsche (ICE vehicle) and been offered book price for the Taycan of only £41k. 2 years and lost £80k!! Worse still it’s on a PCP and he still owes £78k. A battery pack is £43k for the car if it was damaged meaning basically the cars worth nothing now. This video highlighted the top 10 depreciating EV’s after a year but the pictures much worse on all EV’s after 2/3/4/5 years. If you like to buy a shiny new car every 2/3 years stay well away from EV’s. Yes I hear the argument for leasing but it’s like renting your house! You’ve nothing to show for the expense you paid out when you finally get rid of it.
These talking heads hardly account for the difference between the excellent Tesla vehicles and the ev turds the rest of the Legacy Auto have produced. Resale value is meaningless so long as you own a Tesla bc the existing fleet keep getting better with well executed OTAU as well as being very reliable, safe cars that are fun to drive.
I recently went for the Kona, second hand bargain, hell of a car, so pleased with it. I was going to use random local pub CCS chargers but fortunately I live not too far from Tesla superchargers that charge non-Teslas. Tesla are well ahead with their charging network and pricing compared to others, very impressed.
Win win for yourself then ,the Tesla chargers for non Teslas are a great choice quick and easy a boon to the charging network not to mention the reduced costs against other big time players like instavolt and gridserve
This is interesting. I've a mate that wants to get shot of his Kona "coz it's a pain in the arse to charge with no driveway" and here you are, saying you bought one thinking random chargers would be enough. I should say, he lives under five miles from a big bank of Tesla chargers, so can you tell me what he's simply "not getting" please? 😁
@@matbowden9156 hah well it depends how much you want an EV, it is possible to own one without a drive, I don't mind that trade off for now. The Kona is slow to charge compared to other EVs now, but most of the time I can charge to around 77% that will take 40mins depending time of the year, probably less in the summer - that's once a week. It takes maybe another 40 mins to get to 100%! (again, quicker in summer) But that's only needed for driving on holidays etc. Tesla cars for example are using the full 200-250kw or close I think, so that really is rapid. If a family member (that owns an EV) gets a 7kw charger I can use that, I just have to visit 5 hours per week :)
@@fw5933 ~£16500, 2021, ~40300 miles, less than 2.5 years old, great condition, it had the expensive 40000 mile service done, no issues, 2.5+ warranty left. I'm not expecting any issues. There are some reports of the clicking reduction gears on the Kona but I made sure it doesn't have that on the test drive. I'd done plenty of research and was either going to be this or the eNiro, but I didn't need the extras or space in the rear seats.
Sticking with the i-Pace, Jaguar dealers have their used approved top of the range models (with around average mileage) listed with the following average prices; 2023 - £44k = 55% (of new list price) 2022 - £36k = 47% 2021 - £33k = 43% 2020 - £31k = 40% 2019 - £28k = 37% Suggesting a 2 - 3 year old car is the sweet spot. As mentioned below, it's just a case of deciding when (if) to pull the trigger.
These sort of depreciation figures are going to create havoc with the PCP finance concept with big losses for the car companies and no residual value for customers to put towards there next PCP deal.
@@actuallypaulstanley no one apart from the company that owns the vehicle - guaranteed future value is always built into PCP contracts, though there's probably room for a financial scandal in there somewhere!
IPace owner for 3 years and 40k miles. Only thing to go wrong is the gas strut on the electric boot opener. Fixed promptly by the main dealer under warranty. Only had one service and one set of tyres. Got an Etron 55 as well which has fantastic DC charging curve but drives like a barge, plus I don’t like the clever “coasting regen” that means you can’t really one pedal drive it (unlike the Jag which has great regen). Anyway always looking around for something that does it much better than the IPace and can’t really see anything that is worth the extra🤷♂️.
I've long admired the iPace. I see a fair few of them too. I kind of get why they don't sell in bucket loads. 1. People saddle it with the ICE Jaguar reliability reputation - It's a BEV and there's little to go wrong. 2. Jaguar piddled off market dominator Tesla buyers/owners by falsely comparing it. 3. It's also not the most energy or space efficient, but outside of Tesla, what premium car is? What people miss is that it's the best Chelsea tractor out there by a mile. It's very comfortable, goes and handles really well, and has terrific off-road capability [see tests where they do it].
List prices are pure fantasy now, apart from Tesla. £10k off a Corsa easily if you look. Stellantis are the worst for this, putting out unachievable prices. The new e308 is already being discounted more than 20% on-line. It’s ridiculous and needs to stop. I drive a Peugeot e208 but as a company car and the monthly lease price of this on my scheme would be 40% more now than last year. I doubt I’ll get another company one as a one year old for £15k or less makes more sense.
Let's be honest though, the depreciation of ALL expensive cars is truly shocking, regardless of the power train. It's just a fact of life for those who have money to burn. It's worse when the products are rapidly evolving, and the desirability of new models decimates that of the older ones. Nobody is making people buy EVs, it's a choice. Early adopters always have the worst experience when it comes to reliability, quality and in this case infrastructure. Don't bleat if you're one of those, it's your choice and you're obviously wealthy enough to take a punt on something without a track record. The rest of us will probably never buy a new car, I certainly haven't. We have to wait for your cast offs, when depreciation brings them within our reach.
I was all in for jumping onto the electric vehicle lifestyle. But unfortunately the insurance quotes this morning for a Peugeot e208 doesn't make this choice financially balance out for me. I only drive 10 miles a day and assumed this would be an ideal switch, its a shame. Money saved on fuel will be wasted on insurance.
Yup, that the unspoken reality the 1st wave zealots won't tell you. You only save money if your ex ICE cost a fortune with Insurance and road tax, had low to moderate mpg, and you do 10k miles a year. Even then you really need to home charge on a cheap rate, to minimise public charging costs
this is not our experience- we are paying 30% more for a zoe than we did last year but its still pretty cheap. I think if you buy a rocket sled with the same bhp as a 1990s supercar and performance to match then funnily enough the insurance is going to reflect that risk
@@stuartburns8657I'm paying the same for my AWD polestar 2 as I was for a 1 litre Ford fiesta. Insurance is high across the board right now, it isn't EV specific.
I did exactly this I had a 2021 Kia Soul First Edition that I had on lease through work on a great deal. That went back when I changed jobs and I picked up a 2020 one with 33K miles and 4 years warranty left on it for just under 19K back in September as it just made more sense than going back to a lease when I looked around.
@shikoku14 Yup... it definitely pays to research and use your head. Back in 2021 when people were falling over themselves to buy overpriced cars... I sold two AMGs and invested in shares. I replaced the nice Mercs for an old diesel Honda FRV... (practical but ugly). Then when I finally saw a great Leaseloco deal on the EV... I thought that will do until this whole madness settles down. In 2025 I'm confident that there will be dozens of great second hand EVs to own.... Did fancy the iD Buzz lease for £399!! But who knows... maybe next year a long wheel base? 😆
@stevebeever2442 Interesting view but I guess for some it's all a conspiracy! For others it's just a free marketplace and people will buy what they want. I personally need to do 200 to 300 miles non-stop and for that an old diesel works. My wife needs to do 20 to 45 minutes drive and for that her EV costs approx 1/10th of her previous petrol car. But no Men in Black held a gun to our heads to choose. We simply selected what fits best. I also commute into London and the best fit is a 600cc scooter... Cheap insurance, no ULEZ, no congestion charge, easy parking & cheapest maintenance.
I had to sell my Peugeot 508 hdi I got£900:00 for it I would get a second hand ev if I could get one for similar money I only neeed a 200mile range as I would only use it as a runabout any ideas?
This is very normal in an emergent market, especially one where you have such fast technological progress - give it 5 - 10 years and then it will stabilize itself. The market is just crazy right now: here you have the Chinese, then you have some traditional car makers and over there Tesla, and everyone want's to have a piece of the cake. It's a big re-shifting of the entire car industry: 10 year ago there were basically zero EVs on the road, now there are more than 12 millions of them. The sad truth is also that most companies don't know (yet) how to make good EVs, so companies that have a huge EV knowledge, like Tesla and BYD, took over the majority of the market.
There aren't enough rare earth minerals on the planet let alone grid capacity to even anything remotely like allow it to "stabilise". Wake the living feck up.
It is not a market but driven by legislation being imposed within strict time limits imposed irrespective of whether the manufacturers can or cannot produce the technology effectively. The politicians and bureaucrats imposing this will likely have no idea whatsoever as to how any of the required technology works or if it is actually possible.
@@michaeld5888 It works and is possible since more than a decade, so I don't see your point? There is also maybe some market distortion because of the regulations but the market itself exists outside of that. The government doesn't drive the market - they try to protect local manufacturers from the competition in the market. The politicians and bureaucrats are mostly following the suggestions of the industry, it's naive to assume otherwise. There is much more behind the curtains than you think - one major factor is China: for them every barrel oil that they don't need to import is a win situation and everyone in the car industry knows that it's just a matter of time till they can flood the world with cheaper and better cars than everyone else. Just take VW: they produce in China since a long time, also their main market was China (so they know it also first hand). They loose billions now because they can't compete on the Chinese EV market, it's all BYD and Tesla now who make the big money there. They simply can't afford to not make EV cars if they want to stay alive in the next decade. The second factor is Tesla: they completely disrupted the car market - they have not only shown that you can make EVs practical, that they can be dirt-cheap to run and cost far less over their lifetime than ICE cars, but also that you can completely dump the entire car distribution system and make everything cheaper.
Not one Jaguar I-Pace on sale on autotrader for anything like the suggested £30k, cheapest '23 car currently is asking £40k, where are CAP getting these figures coming from?
Buy it in Switzerland as it glues to the pavement of dealerships. Think you get the Jaguar here below my Kia EV6 AWD offering far more in everything besides power that I only could use on race track. But also there the Kia performed better and longer, even being faster than comparable ICE Alfa Romeo Stelvio Quadrofoglio Verde with 510 Ferrari PS but less torque.😂
I think part of the issue here is that people were paying silly money 2 yrs ago for all cars including EVs. go back 3 or 4 and it was much more sensible. We paid 16k for a 69 plate Zoe at 1yr old in nov20. now its worth about 8k but its cost us nothing for 3yrs. We were offered more than we paid for it 2yrs ago which is nuts. If we hadnt needed a car we'd have sold it and sat on the cash for a couple of years.
Interesting prices but these are the trade values. With average markup on secondhand pricing being 12-15%, (so presumably there’d be lower than 12% and high than 15%). The price for a good clean buy, could be another 15%-18% above the quoted prices. But still, a saving on new prices. Looking at ex-leased vehicles, where it’s common to have an initial minimal allowed mileage. The possible prices on a 2-3yr. old EV, could be a bargain compared to new pricing. Just don’t expect to resell it in another 3yrs., with 60-70k on the clock for much more than scrap value.
To get an i-Pace listed on autotrader for less than the price on screen it's 30k Miles & 2022 or 2021. One hopes the fall is an indication a similar proportional drop will occur on the forecourts.
@@bwarey52- 2yr. old EVs with 10,000mi per year losing 20%-nearly 40% on original sticker price. I’m not say depreciation is a linear progression; but you have to wonder how much they’ll be worth, with treble the mileage and the ever changing EV tech.
Throw away cars, The depreciation for electric cars is awful. They make absolutely no sense. Imagine a tower block with 40/50 families, how would they all charge them up! They are an absolute joke.
These ARE trade prices. Cheapest 1yr old Lexus UX 300e is about £24K. Most £27K upwards (not £20K) ! Autotrader prices. Why use trade prices for your comparison ? Still massive bargains compared with new though 👍
totally agree, what are they thinking to quote trade prices that most of the people watching can not purchase at. why not just quote actual prices, very very annoying video
@@nicksportster8711Never understood why people trade cars in for new models. You are always better off selling and buying privately. Especially with cars under 2 years old! The garages and forecourts have to make money somewhere, a forecourt 'deal' is never the best deal...
Since seeing 2/3 year old iPaces in the mid twenties late last year I’ve been sorely tempted. We had one for 6 weeks while our Ioniq 38kW was waiting for a replacement part. The range and charging speed isn’t up to more modern EVs, and JLR reliability is always a concern in the back of my mind, but it’s such a nice car to drive and to be in, and size wise it’s perfect for our family. There are plenty of bargains to be had out there.
It’s not just EV,s that have dropped. The used car market in general has had a period of new year adjustments. Whatever new car you buy, you’ve lost the vat,dealer margin, first year costs etc.Quite a big drop, on its own. Glad some sanity has taken hold in used car values. They’ll be more decline as the year progresses. At least more EV,s will be affordable and available, as the earlier cars on lease and contract, enter the market place. Thanks for the content.
You've mentioned the Scottish Used EV loan in a couple of podcasts, however, the loan was closed to new applications around the end of November 2023 as they had run out of funds. There is currently no indication as to whether it will return in the new financial year.
This has happened every year. It usually reopens in April- but considering the SNP's abysmal finances currently I wouldn't be surprised if the shelved it.
@@hamsterminator I would suggest that bearing in mind the news today that the UK economy is in recession, it’s not just the Scottish Government’s finances that are abysmal, the Tories are also looking at slashing public services (if they haven’t done that enough since 2010). The difference here is that the Scottish Government are probably balancing the books and prioritising, whereas the Tories are slashing public services to provide pre-election tax bribes to the electorate. We can politicise this if you wish, but it’s really not helpful.
Recently I bought a 1 year old, with 10k miles, VW ID.5 Pro Performance style for 28k. The car is great and looks like new. Only problem was the battery health, it is at 92%. The car was used by the dealer as demo/company car and I don't think they cared much about treating the battery well - probably always DC-charged to 100%.
I think the VWs take a big hit in battery degradation in the first year or 2. I picked up a 2 year old ID3 recently and has lost 6%, still plenty enough for me.
When I was looking at e up January/Feb time last year a 70 plate with 20k miles at main dealer with 2 years warranty thrown in for around £16800 maybe. Later got one in September at non franchise main dealer with 22k and they knocked £3k off so £11999. Worth the years of saving and watching market cone to me.
I bought a beautiful Audi Etron RS Gt one year ago for £120K and have done 4300 miles. It’s now worth £65K. Disaster. The reason is that the public have woken up to the electric car/ climate change con and fewer people want them whilst there are many more on the market.
The Corsa depreciation thing hits me hard... I was stupid and got an e208 nearly 2 years ago at £32k on PCP and now coming up to 2 years it is already closing in on the balloon payment in terms of valuation. Like jesus I hate myself for this.
Just think of it as a lease car and hand it back at the end of term. The horrific depreciation is the dealer's or manufacturer's problem then. That's one of the advantages of a PCP deal. I do feel for you though, not having any equity in your car to trade up with. It's definitely worse for EVs than ICE cars as well. My daughter's Kia Picanto will be worth about double the 3 year residual payment of £6000 when her PCP ends in a couple of months time.
Buying at the top of the largest car value spike was always a disaster waiting to happen. If you think it's bad in the UK, in the US they got all that plus insane markups from the stealiships. Honestly expecting a mini sub-prime implosion in the next 18 months
I got a e-corse brand new in July 2022 on a pcp. I’m treating it as a lease, so I will be definitely handling it back as soon as I can. The only bonus is that I only pay £260pcm, so it’s not that bad for a brand new car, and I must admit the car is really good for what I use it for. But at the end of the term, 4yrs, it’ll be almost worthless.
@@stuartburns8657 sort off. I traded in my old car ( 2010 Suzuki swift), which they gave me £2k for, and that covered the deposit and also the installation of the wall charger, so I think I got a half decent deal.
This is very interesting and the value drops are pretty consistent - around 37/38%. It would be very interesting to see how this rate of depreciation compares with equivalent ICE and Hybrid model values? The huge over-pricing that went on as legacy auto makers started to develop their EV offerings is now quite clear to see.
I agree - even a cursory reference to the equivalent ICE cars' depreciation for each of these would've (hopefully... ) shown that these MASSIVE drops in value are not just unique to EVs... 🤞
From what I am seeing EVs are now down at about the same price as ICE. With cars like the Kia Niro, and Hyundai Kona it is easy to do comparisons as they are available in both guises. Taking Tom's pick of the Lexus UX on Autotrader there is a 2022 EV with 4380 miles for £20000 while a comparable Hybrid is £22000. I am guessing that the EV was originally more than the Hybrid.
The e-niro is a very nice car for a sensible price, and great range and efficiency. The _only_ disadvantage is relatively slow fast charging (50kW, where newer cars are 100+). But if you don't fast charge on the go often/at-all, then you don't care.
@@xxwookey77Kw dc not 50. Agreed still slow by modern standards but I’ve been next to a Jag I-pace with 100Kw and it was only pulling 6Kw faster than my e-Niro at almost the same state of charge. The e-Niro’s range though is hardly beaten by any 2023 issued cars
@@graham5649 Thanks for the correction. Peak power is not necessarily all that informative - how long it stays high makes a big difference. I wish it was easier to find charge curves for all cars as it's an important bit of info.
Not used car depreciation, I bought a BMW i4 40 a year ago, the depreciation has been shocking. The same car at autotrader prices shows over 30% depreciation in year one, and that's at retail prices, not part-ex, so reality will be much worse. This goes on my list of things I wish I'd known previously.
We leased our eNiro 3 years ago in part because of uncertainty then and in part affordability. Love the car and will lease again next year. @@modernschoolatlas
I have 2007 diesel C-Max bought for £4000 in 2017 - still running well with no problems. I'll replace it this years with another 10 year old car (possibly another 10 year old C-Max diesel.) I have Zero interest in an EV at ANY price.
I'm not sure where these depreciated prices are coming from (probably made up during someone's lunch break!) but they're not reflected here in Surrey/Hampshire. I checked my used prices from the start of last year with what's available now and, if anything, prices have gone up, not down. Yet another example of 'journalists' not checking their sources just to make a clickbait video. Well done!
Of all the runabouts the VW E-UP makes most sense in the city. Great spacious little car... Totally super efficient and well made. I would always chose the VW against the Corsa.
@cannygrowabeard I totally agree... Even 6ft driver with 6ft passengers in the rear!! Of course you would never believe it from looking at the outside.
I think the manufacturers purposely increased the prices on EVs to slow down the transition from ICE vehicles. Now they need to clear their inventories as newer EV cars are coming at lower prices and better ranges. Great for consumers wanting to switch to an EV but were scared of the depreciation. If you don't do long commutes and can charge at home, their are some great bargains out there. Go get them!!!
EVs are expensive to make. That's why they are expensive to buy. James Dyson spent 500 million pounds to make a small cheap EV and discovered that EV makers were losing money on every car sold so he abandoned the idea. There will be plenty of EV makers going bankrupt in the future.
@@mgcarmkm4520 Some will go bankrupt. Battery prices are plummeting. More manufacturers will copy Tesla's Giga Press fabrication. There will be a rationalisation of software systems as manufacturers find it cheaper to buy an industry standard platform that they can customise. But yes, some brands won't be here in 10 years. The French seem to have invested a lot in EVs and are going to release sub £25k cars in 2024, before Tesla's model 2 in 2025. If they can gain market share in 2024 and get economies of scale, they will do well. I think Polestar might struggle because it is a luxury sector they are operating in and they don't have a volume offering.
@@yoyyaesta4808 I'm sure he knew that 500 million wouldn't deliver a new EV. They bought EVs from other carmakers and dismantled them and discovered that every single make was being sold at a loss. VW estimated they would have to invest 30 billion euros to deliver a range of EVs so 500 million is a drop in the ocean. Legacy carmakers that sell ICE can absorb some of the losses through their ICE sales. BYD are essentially backed by the Chinese government and can absorb huge losses. It will normalise over time.
even list prices are fantasy, on one discount site the MG ZS EV is discounted by 27% which is £9500 off list and dealers still want high prices for other makes they are selling, EV technology is advancing so rapidly with different battery chemistry it pays to wait for a couple of years to buy new
I have an MG ZS EV MkII and I believe that MG are set to bring out a new model of this car later this year. Hence the price drop - they need to clear old stock...
I dont know why people who bought a new EV are complaining of the drop in their value over 12 months.The one year depreciation on any new car is always high .If you buy a new car and plan to keep it for a number of years the fall in its value is just on paper. The thing is dont buy an EV new until the market has settled.They are still relatively new technology (at least for the battery and charging speed) and I believe in 5 years time battery life will be much better and cheaper.
I bought a Nissan Ariya about 14 months ago, knowing full well that the value would fall. It’s inevitable when dealing with such fast pace developing tech. My intention is to keep it for at least 6 years… maybe longer.
I was just to buy one new last week at comparable Tesla prices, when I made a search on similar 3 year old cars and was shocked on the depreciation, so I hold back the decision. I like the car and hope you have been pleased with yours as well.
Im sure I read that insurance companies were not insuring them , and if they did they were sky high. Ill wait for Hydrogen to become affordable in future, oh and the battery replacement, put on my mortgage lol
As an old mechanic I love the new tech EV... But the increased weight, worry On batteries, depreciation, initial cost, software lockout.... Yes it puts me off...my old diesel 225k on clock drives like new, had it eight years and it only cost £100......free motoring v mortgage on car... No brainer... Sticking with my diesel 😊
8 x annual service = £100? No brake pads? "free motoring" includes free fuel? It's not quite free but I do accept that currently EVs have a higher sticker price when new. All brands (except Tesla and just this year Volvo - although that's just a badge owned by Chinese automaker Geely) in the West are losing money on every car. When they sort out manufacturing efficiencies (or just go bust) prices will continue to come down until they're cheaper to buy initially than ICE. Until then enjoy your diesel but please don't leave it ticking over near my kids.
@@garyrooksby I can't promise those huge trucks that have diesel engines in them , transporting the food that feeds your kids will have stop start or even adblue.... Not that mine has either but lots of pollution there .. And even your cars battery has an enviromental cost you eV types like to deny, power generation... Oil, coal, gas or nuke... When no solar or wind.. Not as clean as you like to think... 👍
Basically they were wau overpriced new because manufacturers still needed to sell ice cars. The 2nd hand prices are realigning with equivalent ice cars. Which is great for used buyer's who have home charging.
In my personal experience depreciation only matters if one changes their car too often. I keep my car for a minimum of 10yrs (13 in one particular case) and then throw it away. That's 10% depreciation per annum or less if I keep it longer. No complaints from my end.
Phew, Mini iElectric isn’t in the top ten as I was expecting it to be - high initial purchase price and low range count against it BUT it’s huge fun to drive, well built and pretty efficient unless you really really thrash it (which is great fun though!)
Companies could right off 100% of their EV's against tax so they all went out and bought expensive Porsches, now they are a few years old they are all hitting the market together.
Hello from the west coast of Canada. No new technologies keep any resale value when the technology is still rapidly improving; when I bought my '23 Chevy Bolt euv in early 2023, I didn't expect it to have any residual value; I wanted an inexpensive, good-quality ev, and that's what I got. If the Bolt has zero resale value, it might end up being a battery storage system for my impending solar system.
Depreciation as a % of the new price caused by the falling new price actually is only harmful for the accountants and not for the average user who will get his new car for the full price reduction.
I wish the cars were available to us at those prices. Trade prices are so much lower than consumer prices for 2nd hand. It would also be interesting to have had the current day new car price for same model and battery capacity. Also remember that the prices a year or two ago were still held high as supply of chips and parts were limited and new cars were often dlayed by months. These affects were still keeping second hand prcices too high. Then we compare to good supply and normalised prices. i feel this could show the bad value of EV''s and put people off who want a new car. However ideal for the prices more people buy at.
We had one EV Evangelist in our family , she is a school teacher and talked for several years about buying an electric car and told us all we needed to buy one NOW . 18 months ago she got a full electric skoda enyaq on a PCP . after one year of nightmare, of range anxiety and 3 times being stranded plus costly and time consuming charging driving the 620 mile round trip to visit her father she has changed it for a petrol skoda at enormous financial cost . Our conclusion is that for all but the committed enthusiast that makes the use of their car their main focus and passion the currant generation of electric cars and electric infrastructure are not fit for purpose. Hydrogen and CNG look to be far more user friendly solution. Running my 119g co2 bmw 520d for another 10 years looks a lot better for the planet than building an electric car anyway.
For some the electric car is wonderful , if they can charge at home or work on a low tariff. If they don't travel far from home especially the unpopulated north . If the huge cost is not a problem. At present we live in a flat with underground parking no possibility of charging and the insurers now suggesting that electric cars may not be acceptable in the basement My wife has a 90 mile round trip to work where there is no charging. I have a 140mile round trip to work at present but stay over 2 to 3 days a week. My wife works as an office manager in the health service under 30k per year I work in construction so have very variable income . I usually travel by motorcycle to save fuel. We live fairly well because we budget and are careful. We gave our 13 year old 200 thousand mile car that I have maintained myself to our daughter this year and bought an eight month old Skoda Scala 1.5 (just a little bigger than a vw golf ) from skoda main dealer this ex skoda uk management car cost £15300 way less than half the cost of an electric car I expect it to last 10 or 12 years. and I can maintain it myself Could I respectfully as that you climb out of your upper middle class bubble , go and speak in detail to some working people , examine how the finances and how the lives of the millions of ordinary working people function . We leave for work at 5.30am latest my wife does minimum of 37 hours over 4 days she is an hour away at 6.30am for a 7.00am start she often does not finish until 6.00pm home after 7 . Electric cars for most are not practical , they are not affordable , and they are in many ways as bad or worse for the environment than their petrol diesel equivalents. @@localreviewking134
@@grantwebster8157 I am confident batteries will improve, in time. The main concern is longevity of the ones we have now. Perhaps, how safe they are in terms of fire. We do see a more level playing field with prices too. The little Dacia Spring will sell like hot cakes, I guess. They are here to stay, like it or loathe it. We, do still have choices, just.
They're great daily drivers if you can charge at home. For most people daily drive is under 100miles, often closer to 50 miles. But as always dumb people come and try to eat bowl of soup with a fork.😂 If someone without home charging capabilities buys one (10-25p home vs 30-60p per kwh at charger) and on top of that they buy it for 600miles holiday trips instead of daily commute then they deserve all that's coming 😂
Currently there is an Ioniq 5 73 plate with 18 miles on the clock going for 33k. Basically new with 14k off. Good news for anyone wanting to jump into an EV.
I’m not so sure that price drop is that exceptional when you look at percentages. There was a saying when I was much younger and looking to buy my first car: ‘the most expensive trip in a new car is the first one, from the dealer home. It cuts the value in half.’ So for 30 years, I only bought 2nd hand cars and drove them until they got too expensive to repair. The big question is what the price drop will be after 4 or 5 years, when the loan ends and the big last payment has to take place. That’s usually the moment to decide to make the payment or to drop the car and renew the loan agreement for a new car. Side note. Bought my first new car 4 years ago: a Seat Mii Electric. Love it! Not going to sell it anytime soon.
I have said on all of your reviews of the iPace that anyone buying into this model will loose a lot of money. Plus the iPace may be a lovely drive, but it is dreadfully unreliable. NOT made by Jaguar. Any warranty claims means massive delays, in waiting for parts.
Lost 8k on my 71 plate long range leaf which resulted in my Ariya order being cancelled. Now left in negative equity. Had petrol/diesel cars prior and never been in this position. Unsure whether electric is still the future. Did I mention my insurance has doubled to £550 yearly 😡
Just on the insurance front. I doubt the increase is solely down to the car being an EV. When the auto insurance premium, have nearly doubled across the board. Unless you own a Hyundai or Kia or JLR. All of which are too easy to steal and consequently, their insure has skyrocketed.
Hopefully more vehicle manufacturers will start offering insurance options and will undercut the greedy insurance companies in the UK. They have not seen these massive increases in Norway where Evs are now outselling ICE by a huge margin or elsewhere in western Europe either so its just the greedy UK insurance industry at play.
insurance premiums across the board have doubled and EVs are totally the reason for this.. no repair garages wants to touch them so most RVs even with silly small damage repairs are being written off by insurance companys..and people with diesel or petrol cars are paying for it with massive increased policys
@@audriusa5368 have you heard of the halves and thirds rule? In short when you have paid back half of the vehicles value you can return vehicle. I do feel your pain used car electric prices have fallen through the floor. Covid and Tesla didn’t help.
I sold cars at a new car dealership for 28 months. (I was told that was a record!) Customers were always shocked at how little their trade-ins were worth but I reminded them that when they traded in their cars, they were basically paying us to sell their car for them. It wasn't the dealerships that were setting the low prices. It was the used car buyers who were dictating just how little used cars were worth. Today, there's a glut of new EVs on the market. The dealers can't get rid of them. Someone looking for a new EV will settle for a year old one only if there's a 40% discount, otherwise, they'll buy new at a discounted price. Believe me, the dealership would love to sell their trade-ins for more, but they can't because it's the consumers who refuse to buy used unless there is a substantial discount. That's just how a free market works. When there was a worldwide supply chain problem effectively reducing the number of new cars available, used car customers were willing to spend more on used cars. It's all about supply and demand.
@@datathunderstorm It's not designed to be a city car. It's a crossover SUV. The e-Up is a city car (with a range of 150 miles) and yes, for that, 100 miles is fine. I love my Mazda, they're great cars but with a realistic range of 80 miles (less in the winter) is mind-boggling with today's battery tech.
Then there's insurance. I just got quote on my ice car BMW Z4 E89, lowest fully comp. £225. That is what i paid 10 years ago for insurance. Will insurance steer people to remain in ice cars. OK it reflects the value of the car now.
I saw an old 1974 Morris Milkfloat for sale recently and really thought that would be fun to say I have an electric van!! traditional lead acid batteries so I guess less likely to catch fire!
I can't rid myself of the mental picture of driving 10,000 miles and throwing £1 or £2 pound coins out of the window every time the odometer records each mile completed. The commentary concentrates on how much of a bargain the used cars might seem but I feel sorry for the customers who are taking the loss through depreciation at those rates. The depreciation only measures the price drop and doesn''t include any cost of loans that might have been involved in the new purchase. If this happened in the house market then I suspect that it would spark a revolution of middle class homeowners in the Home Counties.
Note thong that batteries are almost universally covered but an eight year warranty… From my two years experience and 70,000 miles I’ve lost 10miles of range
They will last for over 150,000 miles and then degrade slowly. They don't just stop. V few battery replacements have been needed and most of those will be under guarantee anyway.
Some of the cars have the 12volt batteries causing problems because if they fail the whole system locks up, even if you are inside the car, you will not get out even the windows are locked up.
I just bought a Zoe 2020 but with only 7000 miles for £11.5k the battery range indicated 220 miles so it was just driven around town. Reason for the Zoe is it can charge on AC on the street for 40p/KwH . No possibility to charge at home and dont want 80p/kwh for something like a corsa on a faster charge etc etc
@@matbowden9156 AC charging on the street is 40p/kWh but DC charging via CCS or ChaDeMo etc is 80-85p/kWh. So twice the price. See chargeplace scotland map where it gives the price
@@roberthartley6629 👍 the closest charger to me is in PE28 2AA and works out at 82p per kWh. I think I'll stick with my off peak rate at home, but it's nice to know there is an alternative to zap map north of the wall I guess. Cheers 🍻
I can't believe that your promoting electric cars and then proving to people not to get into these cars, simply amazing! Zero resale value on your money as soon as you purchase this car even after a 1 year you have just lost 37% of your value just from your purchase. So everyone who was thinking about getting into an electric car forget about it your burning your money doing so.
It depends on whether you want transportation or an investment. Prices are dropping because they are becoming common, and not being seen as a statement anymore.
Wow. Journalists that are massively pro EV over ICE cars singing the praises of how cheap a 1 year old EV is. Missing the point entirely that they are so cheap because nobody wants them. If they’ve lost so much in 1 year think what your bargain EV will be worth when it’s 3 years old. All this countdown did for me was convince me not to buy an EV.
It doesn’t matter what the ongoing depreciation is if the original owner/PCP leases has taken the big hit. If you run it for several years you’ll reap the benefits of very low running & servicing costs. We bought a 2 year old tops spec e2008 with 16000 miles on it at 50% of its original list price and love it. Even if the value halves again in 5 years it’s still not expensive. I expect the landscape will be very different then and ICE cars will look overpriced and start depreciating hard.
@@markbennett6658 we will see who’s laughing when someone runs into your three year old £40k car and your insurance company pays you £10k for its market value. My point was its depreciation isn’t about to stop. That’s because most people can’t charge at home and if you buy secondhand you’ve got £1k min to pay for your own charger if you do have off road parking. ICE cars are holding their values stronger than ever in the trade. EV’s are not the future for a lot of car drivers. I do have a drive but there’s not a single EV on the U.K. market that can do what I need a car to do.
@@B16D4VE the depreciation never stops on anything. You can’t go motoring for free. I paid sub 20K for my car including the dealer mark up. Plenty of people have off road parking as do I. The £1K for the 7kw charger I see as investing for the future in the infrastructure of the house which now like solar and battery adds rather than reduces the value of the property. Much faster charging, better battery technology, improved range and production techniques I believe will make the pendulum swing the other way. I might be wrong but I don’t think so.
That's the point. These don't suit everyone, but are bargains for those who can accommodate them. I'm hoping for further drops personally. I've enjoyed watching these prices fall last year, I predict smaller drops this year though personally. Happy to be proven wrong though.
@@nickwhite6638 The other point in response to the reply from the original poster would be that if an insurance company pays out £10K on a 3 year old EV that cost £40K new that’s ok because you’d be able to source a like for like replacement for £10K. After all that’s ’indemnity’ the fundamental principle of insurance!
@@SqwarkParrotSpittingFeathers Electric cars do nothing whatsoever to combat global warming and mass migration or mass starvation, on the contrary, so you are stupid.
@SqwarkParrotSpittingFeathers the car sector is a very small part of UK emmissions and the UK is a very small part of world emmissions. If you really want to reduce your car emmissions don't continue manufacturing electric vehicle carbon release, which is much greater than an ice car or continue pumping carbon into the atmosphere from electricity made from energy released largely from fossil fuels anyway and contributing to mining environmental damage, as well as child exploitation and physical harm getting cobalt out of artesian mines in the Congo. Do what I did and ride a push bike to work for 25 years. You are polluting more than you need to by buying an electric car, which are only slightly better CO2 emitters than ice cars. The least polluting option for cars, is keeping the one you have got until it can't work any more and using it as little as possible.
Bad luck for private buyers.They have spent their hard earned cash ,encourage by the Government,pushed by the Greens to go electric and now face losing 50% of the value in 2 years.The most disappointing aspect is that EVs are not Green.
The electricity they use is to a large extent derived from renewables in the UK and elsewhere. I am at this moment charging mine from solar panels and happily not burning fossil fuels. I'm also leasing over a 4 year period and I'm happy with that and more than happy with the EV driving experience. Not going back to petrol thanks.
I bought a petrol up for 6k three years ago, with 11k miles on it. Its worth at least the same now. I considered an e up briefly, but didnt see one less than 20 k. Im not sorry.
I have had 2 52kw Renault Zoe. Kept the first one about 3 months. Paid £18000 and got £11000 as a trade in. It was 1 yr old only 2000 miles on the clock. That was trading it back t a Renault dealership. The insurance costs more than an ICE CAR. The monthly maintenance I pay is a little over a third more than my ICE car. The cheap night electric was a con. Yes £0.089 a kw, but they put your normal kw cost up. In the end not being an high mileage user it was cheaper by £100’s a year to pay normal rate for electric (no cheap night rate) and the decreased kWh charged for that made our total bill less. After 2 electric cars and now knowing the hidden costs on top of the high price to purchase it and the shocking trade in price, won’t be getting a third one.
I don't really understand why used prices are so low, but it's fantastic news for me personally as my next EV, as my current and last one were also, will be a used car. Perhaps the ignorance about battery longevity that still seems to be rife, puts people off buying used EVs? One thing I have noticed, which is partly due to the greater choice I now have because of used prices, is how cars that were once high on my wish list around twelve months ago are dropping down that list because greater charging speeds are now within my reach. I used to lust after a 42kWh BMW i3, but I can now get a Stellantis car that charges at twice the rate. Not as interesting or as exiting, but practicality sometimes has to win out. The eUP or a ZOE ZE50 would have been excellent contenders, but when they only charge at 37 and 50kW respectively, the MG ZS, Kona, Niro, Soul are more future proof (just). Charging speeds date cars faster than anything else for me. If you never or rarely use public chargers, then anything on the list is as good as the next, more than once a month on a rapid charger though, and you have two lists in there.
@@garysmith5025 You are right of course. You have to do the sums to get the best balance. The big part of the equation that still steers me towards a faster charge speed is the fact that few cars are double the efficiency of the rest. The range seems to be between just under 3miles/kWhr for some horrendously 'thirsty' German behemoth to about 4 point something for a Tesla or Hyundai (we're talking motorway journeys here). That 30% difference could easily be 'out charged' if your rate is double or more. You hit on a good point that even ultra rapid chargers rarely hit anywhere near their peak. I am an eternal optimist though and dream of the days when they won't be throttled and the government will have put enough chargers in to cover the uptake of EVs and there won't be any roadworks on the M6, and roads will be repaired properly so that potholes don't appear as soon as the workers who fixed the last ones have left and...and...and....😆
Whilst I agree that the prices quoted are hard to achieve as a private buyer, the general thrust of the article is that of declining second hand ev values which cannot be disputed. New users will frequently be getting their car through a tax efficient leasing scheme which results in a higher proportion of new electric cars entering the market. When they are entering the second hand market the proportion of buyers does not reflect the same proportion, hence values are falling. I also think that there is wariness of how long the batteries will last, the public infastructure, and, unless you can charge at home, electric care are expensive to run.
I think there's an issue that people who can't charge at home aren't very likely to be in the market for a used EV. I imagine some of the crazy fast EVs are going to be unappealing to used buyers because of insurance costs. I generally don't like spending more than £10k on a car so there's still a way to go before I'm a potential buyer. I quite fancy a Mégane E-Tech and they're falling pretty fast.
I am leasing a Megane E-tech. had it for 6 months now. Love the car but had a couple of issues which are now fixed. 1. Car wouldn't consistently connect to my wall charger but a software patch Actis 6228 solved this. 2. Alarm kept going off when opening and closing car. The cause was the interior lights causing a current surge which set off the alarm. All fixed now. Range in winter is more like 190-200 miles rather than 280 it is marketed at but not an issue as i don't commute far. Teh retail price was £43k last August, but you can get a demonstrator now for £31k.
@@graemeglass7566 I'm glad you like it. I used to have a Zoe ZE40 and that had trouble connecting to the home charger. Chargemaster replaced the charger twice before the issue was resolved. 190 miles winter range is acceptable. I've seen some at £23k recently but for now I'll keep enjoying my Mercedes SLK, I paid £11k for it in 2020 and it's still worth £8k. I sold the Zoe for £13.6k but it's fallen a lot since then. It was £17800 new with a £6200 discount plus the £4.5k grant, battery owned too
It’s good, you can buy cheaper, but this is not good for the seller. Not good for trade-in value either. Why buy new when you lose so much value. Also I’ve heard dealers are not taking EVs as trade-ins after factory warranty expires. As a long-term solution it’s not going to be one size fits all. EVs have too many cons for me.
I'm sort of surprised/not surprised that none of the VW ID Series cars aren't in there. I suppose what I'm asking for is a top to bottom list. It would be nice to see the lurkers - the ones that were close-ish. Anyway, long may it continue. I might actually decide to buy, rather than lease to give back, one day. Why did I lease 3 years ago? Because VW were almost giving away the 150kw/58kWh ID3 Life Pro for £239 pm including maintenance and tyres [initial £2.5K down]. Good car, crap software [still isn't great even with the facelift version]. Shortly after I took up my lease the ID3's went to well over £400 pm, where they've more or less stayed. Oddly, the Cupra Born [same-ish car] is way cheaper still. Anyway, I've just extended mine by a year. Yes, it has gone up under the same terms, but only by £40 pm, and my charging is free at work, so I'm not complaining.
I'm considering doing something similar but haven't yet looked into what would happen with any warranty claims on an out of warranty car (only 3 years on the ID.3). Have you had any confirmation from your lease company?
@ckson8035 What? Confirmation that it is £40 [tbf, it's £41 and change] extra on the same terms? Yes, and I'm continuing it from April. There was nothing in the paperwork to suggest that one iota of my lease had changed.
Sorry, I was referring to the manufacturers warranty expiring at 3 years making the leasee (you or me) liable for any repairs needed after that time, if you extend the lease. It's happened to several unsuspecting leasees - Auto Express did a feature on it, amongst others. It's unlikely the lease company will have taken out an extended warranty on your behalf. Worth checking with them. Incidentally, a 10,000 mile, 1 year old ID3 of the same spec. as yours is worth around £19k trade-in. 50% of its new list price. At 3 years old with 30,000 miles it trades at £16k, 43% of list. So, as with virtually all cars (EVs in particular), the bulk of the ID.3's deprciation is in year one. It's nowhere near as bad as the cars in this video though.
3:43 I took advantage of the loan in 2019 to buy a Tesla model 3 LR. Outstanding scheme although your credit rating has to be very good for them to give it to you. Up to £35k over 6 years 0%.
What's more scary is if you look at what they cost new . My mates iPace cost £79k new and he paid £39k for it at 2 years old with 6000 miles on the clock. Before he got it he asked for a battery health check and they found one dud cell. Jaguar authorised a new battery under warranty at a retail cost of £30k (thats what the dealer said it cost) before he picked it up.
Battery packs are just less than $110 per kWh, so that's £100 per kWh, so unless the iPace has a 300kWh battery the dealer is doing what dealers do, telling lies.
It is a good thing it wasn't a Hyundai. Then the battery would have been more than £39K. (at least in Canada).
That's why nobody wants them !
Jaguar's expensive, and expensive to maintain, what ever the platform. I paid £6K for a gearbox at 70K miles
@@MrDuncl that story is bunkum, it's the price he insurance company gave, not the manufacturer, in reality it's half that. Model S battery is ~ £17K out of warranty (which is 120K miles, longer than most cars go in their life time)
Having wanted an EV for a while but keeping to a tight budget..... I leased a new Citroën E-C4 for £265/mth. Buying new would have cost £540/mth. The 2 year lease allows me to see if I like it whist not being "stuck with it"... Its is actually a nice car and costs approx £20/mth in electric. Far cheaper than our £150/mth in diesel. As soon as the 2 years are up I will have thrown away a few thousand on a car which is not mine, but I have had the use of a car at far less than £540/mth + devaluation!! I can then with a clear mind buy a used EV at a great price and I will get the exact model that works for my family. For me that is a win-win and not a "stuck with a worthless negative equity car".
Totally agree with your choice ,gives you a taste of ev for a limited time to make your minds d up whether it suits your lifestyle and no depreciation to be concerned about and at the lease price it is fantastic .great choice and things may be different in 2 years time good or bad then you can reassess your choices
Did the same for a Renault Megane E-Tech. Leasing is definitely a good option just now.
@paulscott1759 Thanks Paul... 👍
@@graemeglass7566 totally agree there will be a boom in leasing for the next few years to mitigate the value loss due to depreciation of all vehicles
@graemeglass7566 Yes I tested the Renault. Nice fit & finish... decent power & range. I found I hit my head on the roofline getting in and out and thought it was just a little small. However, definitely interested to see the new MPV Scenic version... when it's out and about. 👍
I have a Mokka e and very happy with it. It’s a lovely car, all mod cons and no issues after 16,000 miles. Bought it 18 months ago when Government Grant was still available. I’m also glad that secondhand cars have come down in price even though I’ll be hit when I come to trade mine in. Not sure why Electrifying are so anti Vauxhall.
cos they're shite 🤣
Misleading conversation Ginny and Tom.
Although captioned as such, the prices are TRADE values and NOT available to the general public. You both suggest that they might be.
Us mere mortals need to add 25% for independant dealer sticker prices and 30 - 40% for cars from main dealers.
Really - I checked a couple on autotrader and they were right
Well therefore those percentages are how much the sellers are losing. Hardly an attractive proposition for them.
@@ksawinter I've checked them all on Autotrader and main and independant dealer websites and no cars are advertised for sale at these trade prices. That's why they are called trade prices unfortunately.
I wish they were!
@@allomony4010 There are similar dealer mark-ups on 12 month old petrol or diesel cars though.
Buy any car new for the full list price and sell it back to the dealer a year later with 10k miles on it and you'll only get around 60% of what you paid for it. That's not unique to EVs unfortunately.
Not necessarily - CAP have several different price valuations.
NEVER buy a new Corsa e or e208 as the depreciation is SHOCKING. Great used bargain at half price 1 or 2 years old.
Salesmen used to look if people had Max Bygraves records to judge if they were simple minded, now they look for people with EVs on the drive 🙀
I found a half year old Demo 2019 Peugeot 208HDI, with all the luxury items to imagine (Model change), and I suppose it will easily last my final driving time as now 76? It drives normally well past 26 km/l on a full tank Diesel and it takes 5 minutes to Charge, sorry - fill the tank, at any time, for up to 1200 km range!
And with all the filters and gadgets for driving in Centers of towns also, as Lorries.
I used large Electric forklifts during my working years, so I will never, ever buy an EV.
Massively regret buying my Corsa e. £29.5k new, 18 months later worth nothing.
@@Billy-m1lwhat a stupid blanket statement to post in public.
@@finncarlbomholtsrensen1188nice and nonsensical story.
It’s an interesting video for sure…but have you actually looked at real world prices via auto trader etc? These prices you’re quoting are trade-in prices to dealers like webuyanycar etc. Yes they want your EV for silly money…but you aren’t buying them at that money. 23 plate EQC with 5k miles - £39500. Corsa-E with 6k miles £18k. Not seeing anything close to those cap trade prices….so it’s still higher to buy than this video suggests.
You are looking at asking prices. They might not sell.
@user-yf4fw9jk2q obviously so yes but I doubt anyone is gearing up for selling their cars at trade prices. Certainly dealers won't be. I guess some folks who think webuyanycar offer good rates might...
Literally searching autotrader whilst watching this video and I can't find prices anywhere close to what they are quoting
@@bigstugti you see that moment that you've driven on to the forecourt and the salesman comes over to opine on the value of your trade-in... that's when you're going to be hearing these prices quoted to you, after a long suck of the teeth and "dear oh dear, you didn't buy one of these did you?" whilst you recall just how enthusiastic the (probably) same salesman was when he was selling it to you...
Why wouldn’t they quote the fair value private value? This video makes no sense now…lol
My Cupra Born has dropped almost half it's value in just over a year, cost 38500 now valued between 20000 and 21500 .... I'm stuck now with this car for 3 more years unless I bite the bullet and absorb the loss if I want a change, very disappointed.
Just looked on one of the other bloggers, and it’s not just electric cars that are in free fall, it’s all cars. The hike of prices due to the lack of microchips etc has come back to roost, particularly with everyone tightening the purse strings.
not just microchips etc, the push towards personal Contracts has been used to push new car prices up
The ev motoring press should have been issuing health warnings 18+ months ago with the ridiculous ev pricing that was going on. Some people who paid cash will have been savaged sadly.
EV prices need to come down. lower prices mean more affordable for the masses and ultimately the transition away from ice. EV owners SHOULD lose money, how else are you going to finance affordable used prices?
Yes they should. They have to. I just feel sorry for the cash paying early adopters losing crazy £££ after believing they were in the new norm post covid.
@@tonyfeasby1437 car buyers have made money 2021-2023. in Germany people bought and sold EVs with profit. that has hurt the used market. losing money when selling a used car should be the norm, i really don't see anything crazy about it. being able to afford ev experience years before everyone else also has its advantages.
A mate of mine paid £120k for a Porsche Taycan 2 years ago new from Porsche. He’s just tried to trade it in for a new Porsche (ICE vehicle) and been offered book price for the Taycan of only £41k. 2 years and lost £80k!! Worse still it’s on a PCP and he still owes £78k. A battery pack is £43k for the car if it was damaged meaning basically the cars worth nothing now. This video highlighted the top 10 depreciating EV’s after a year but the pictures much worse on all EV’s after 2/3/4/5 years. If you like to buy a shiny new car every 2/3 years stay well away from EV’s. Yes I hear the argument for leasing but it’s like renting your house! You’ve nothing to show for the expense you paid out when you finally get rid of it.
These talking heads hardly account for the difference between the excellent Tesla vehicles and the ev turds the rest of the Legacy Auto have produced. Resale value is meaningless so long as you own a Tesla bc the existing fleet keep getting better with well executed OTAU as well as being very reliable, safe cars that are fun to drive.
I recently went for the Kona, second hand bargain, hell of a car, so pleased with it.
I was going to use random local pub CCS chargers but fortunately I live not too far from Tesla superchargers that charge non-Teslas. Tesla are well ahead with their charging network and pricing compared to others, very impressed.
Win win for yourself then ,the Tesla chargers for non Teslas are a great choice quick and easy a boon to the charging network not to mention the reduced costs against other big time players like instavolt and gridserve
This is interesting. I've a mate that wants to get shot of his Kona "coz it's a pain in the arse to charge with no driveway" and here you are, saying you bought one thinking random chargers would be enough. I should say, he lives under five miles from a big bank of Tesla chargers, so can you tell me what he's simply "not getting" please? 😁
How much did you get the Kona for, and what's the year and mileage?
@@matbowden9156 hah well it depends how much you want an EV, it is possible to own one without a drive, I don't mind that trade off for now. The Kona is slow to charge compared to other EVs now, but most of the time I can charge to around 77% that will take 40mins depending time of the year, probably less in the summer - that's once a week. It takes maybe another 40 mins to get to 100%! (again, quicker in summer) But that's only needed for driving on holidays etc.
Tesla cars for example are using the full 200-250kw or close I think, so that really is rapid.
If a family member (that owns an EV) gets a 7kw charger I can use that, I just have to visit 5 hours per week :)
@@fw5933 ~£16500, 2021, ~40300 miles, less than 2.5 years old, great condition, it had the expensive 40000 mile service done, no issues, 2.5+ warranty left. I'm not expecting any issues. There are some reports of the clicking reduction gears on the Kona but I made sure it doesn't have that on the test drive. I'd done plenty of research and was either going to be this or the eNiro, but I didn't need the extras or space in the rear seats.
Sticking with the i-Pace, Jaguar dealers have their used approved top of the range models (with around average mileage) listed with the following average prices;
2023 - £44k = 55% (of new list price)
2022 - £36k = 47%
2021 - £33k = 43%
2020 - £31k = 40%
2019 - £28k = 37%
Suggesting a 2 - 3 year old car is the sweet spot. As mentioned below, it's just a case of deciding when (if) to pull the trigger.
These sort of depreciation figures are going to create havoc with the PCP finance concept with big losses for the car companies and no residual value for customers to put towards there next PCP deal.
This is a good point. PCP is very popular in the UK, and there is a very high chance consumers could be in negative equity at the end of it.
PCP contracts contain a ‘good-future-value’ clause don’t they?
If so, nobody can be in negative equity at the end of the PCP term?
@@actuallypaulstanley no one apart from the company that owns the vehicle - guaranteed future value is always built into PCP contracts, though there's probably room for a financial scandal in there somewhere!
@HuhWhat101 you can hand it back. No negative equity.
@@oneeyedgirl617at the end yes. But then u are starting from scratch with your next deposit
IPace owner for 3 years and 40k miles. Only thing to go wrong is the gas strut on the electric boot opener. Fixed promptly by the main dealer under warranty. Only had one service and one set of tyres. Got an Etron 55 as well which has fantastic DC charging curve but drives like a barge, plus I don’t like the clever “coasting regen” that means you can’t really one pedal drive it (unlike the Jag which has great regen). Anyway always looking around for something that does it much better than the IPace and can’t really see anything that is worth the extra🤷♂️.
What a waste of money.
I've long admired the iPace. I see a fair few of them too. I kind of get why they don't sell in bucket loads. 1. People saddle it with the ICE Jaguar reliability reputation - It's a BEV and there's little to go wrong. 2. Jaguar piddled off market dominator Tesla buyers/owners by falsely comparing it. 3. It's also not the most energy or space efficient, but outside of Tesla, what premium car is?
What people miss is that it's the best Chelsea tractor out there by a mile. It's very comfortable, goes and handles really well, and has terrific off-road capability [see tests where they do it].
List prices are pure fantasy now, apart from Tesla. £10k off a Corsa easily if you look. Stellantis are the worst for this, putting out unachievable prices. The new e308 is already being discounted more than 20% on-line. It’s ridiculous and needs to stop.
I drive a Peugeot e208 but as a company car and the monthly lease price of this on my scheme would be 40% more now than last year. I doubt I’ll get another company one as a one year old for £15k or less makes more sense.
Your not wrong - I just checked the e-Corsa out of interest. £32,445 sticker price - £26,275 on carwow
I'll be losing no sleep if the rip off lease cowboys are put out of business overnight.
@@jeromezone and load's have been sold new for £23k over the last 3 years when they needed to hit target's 👍
I think the loan has been reduced to 20,000
Will they still drive London to Edinburgh on a tankfull of fuel in one go?
Let's be honest though, the depreciation of ALL expensive cars is truly shocking, regardless of the power train. It's just a fact of life for those who have money to burn. It's worse when the products are rapidly evolving, and the desirability of new models decimates that of the older ones.
Nobody is making people buy EVs, it's a choice. Early adopters always have the worst experience when it comes to reliability, quality and in this case infrastructure. Don't bleat if you're one of those, it's your choice and you're obviously wealthy enough to take a punt on something without a track record. The rest of us will probably never buy a new car, I certainly haven't. We have to wait for your cast offs, when depreciation brings them within our reach.
I was all in for jumping onto the electric vehicle lifestyle. But unfortunately the insurance quotes this morning for a Peugeot e208 doesn't make this choice financially balance out for me. I only drive 10 miles a day and assumed this would be an ideal switch, its a shame. Money saved on fuel will be wasted on insurance.
Yup, that the unspoken reality the 1st wave zealots won't tell you.
You only save money if your ex ICE cost a fortune with Insurance and road tax, had low to moderate mpg, and you do 10k miles a year.
Even then you really need to home charge on a cheap rate, to minimise public charging costs
With 10 miles a day an electrical bike is an option 😅
this is not our experience- we are paying 30% more for a zoe than we did last year but its still pretty cheap. I think if you buy a rocket sled with the same bhp as a 1990s supercar and performance to match then funnily enough the insurance is going to reflect that risk
@@stuartburns8657I'm paying the same for my AWD polestar 2 as I was for a 1 litre Ford fiesta. Insurance is high across the board right now, it isn't EV specific.
@@hamsterminator I honestly find it difficult to believe given the price and performance differences between those two vehicles
I look at these prices and rejoice in the knowledge that more people can afford more EVs... Lease new, buy second hand.
I did exactly this I had a 2021 Kia Soul First Edition that I had on lease through work on a great deal. That went back when I changed jobs and I picked up a 2020 one with 33K miles and 4 years warranty left on it for just under 19K back in September as it just made more sense than going back to a lease when I looked around.
@shikoku14 Yup... it definitely pays to research and use your head. Back in 2021 when people were falling over themselves to buy overpriced cars... I sold two AMGs and invested in shares. I replaced the nice Mercs for an old diesel Honda FRV... (practical but ugly). Then when I finally saw a great Leaseloco deal on the EV... I thought that will do until this whole madness settles down. In 2025 I'm confident that there will be dozens of great second hand EVs to own.... Did fancy the iD Buzz lease for £399!! But who knows... maybe next year a long wheel base? 😆
I look at these prices and rejoice in the knowledge that the free market is rejecting forced EV's
@stevebeever2442 Interesting view but I guess for some it's all a conspiracy! For others it's just a free marketplace and people will buy what they want. I personally need to do 200 to 300 miles non-stop and for that an old diesel works. My wife needs to do 20 to 45 minutes drive and for that her EV costs approx 1/10th of her previous petrol car. But no Men in Black held a gun to our heads to choose. We simply selected what fits best. I also commute into London and the best fit is a 600cc scooter... Cheap insurance, no ULEZ, no congestion charge, easy parking & cheapest maintenance.
I had to sell my Peugeot 508 hdi I got£900:00 for it I would get a second hand ev if I could get one for similar money I only neeed a 200mile range as I would only use it as a runabout any ideas?
This is very normal in an emergent market, especially one where you have such fast technological progress - give it 5 - 10 years and then it will stabilize itself. The market is just crazy right now: here you have the Chinese, then you have some traditional car makers and over there Tesla, and everyone want's to have a piece of the cake. It's a big re-shifting of the entire car industry: 10 year ago there were basically zero EVs on the road, now there are more than 12 millions of them.
The sad truth is also that most companies don't know (yet) how to make good EVs, so companies that have a huge EV knowledge, like Tesla and BYD, took over the majority of the market.
There aren't enough rare earth minerals on the planet let alone grid capacity to even anything remotely like allow it to "stabilise". Wake the living feck up.
It is not a market but driven by legislation being imposed within strict time limits imposed irrespective of whether the manufacturers can or cannot produce the technology effectively. The politicians and bureaucrats imposing this will likely have no idea whatsoever as to how any of the required technology works or if it is actually possible.
@@michaeld5888 It works and is possible since more than a decade, so I don't see your point?
There is also maybe some market distortion because of the regulations but the market itself exists outside of that.
The government doesn't drive the market - they try to protect local manufacturers from the competition in the market.
The politicians and bureaucrats are mostly following the suggestions of the industry, it's naive to assume otherwise. There is much more behind the curtains than you think - one major factor is China: for them every barrel oil that they don't need to import is a win situation and everyone in the car industry knows that it's just a matter of time till they can flood the world with cheaper and better cars than everyone else. Just take VW: they produce in China since a long time, also their main market was China (so they know it also first hand). They loose billions now because they can't compete on the Chinese EV market, it's all BYD and Tesla now who make the big money there. They simply can't afford to not make EV cars if they want to stay alive in the next decade.
The second factor is Tesla: they completely disrupted the car market - they have not only shown that you can make EVs practical, that they can be dirt-cheap to run and cost far less over their lifetime than ICE cars, but also that you can completely dump the entire car distribution system and make everything cheaper.
Not one Jaguar I-Pace on sale on autotrader for anything like the suggested £30k, cheapest '23 car currently is asking £40k, where are CAP getting these figures coming from?
So these are nonsense figures for non-dealers? @@aldo888fly
You should look again, just seen one for 30K with 2K miles on it
Prices given in the film are trade prices, not retail. These days it is even more important to negotiate.
What the value is and what used car dealers will ask 4 them are 2 different animals...which to be frank has always been the case.
Buy it in Switzerland as it glues to the pavement of dealerships. Think you get the Jaguar here below my Kia EV6 AWD offering far more in everything besides power that I only could use on race track. But also there the Kia performed better and longer, even being faster than comparable ICE Alfa Romeo Stelvio Quadrofoglio Verde with 510 Ferrari PS but less torque.😂
I think part of the issue here is that people were paying silly money 2 yrs ago for all cars including EVs. go back 3 or 4 and it was much more sensible. We paid 16k for a 69 plate Zoe at 1yr old in nov20. now its worth about 8k but its cost us nothing for 3yrs. We were offered more than we paid for it 2yrs ago which is nuts. If we hadnt needed a car we'd have sold it and sat on the cash for a couple of years.
Interesting prices but these are the trade values. With average markup on secondhand pricing being 12-15%, (so presumably there’d be lower than 12% and high than 15%). The price for a good clean buy, could be another 15%-18% above the quoted prices.
But still, a saving on new prices. Looking at ex-leased vehicles, where it’s common to have an initial minimal allowed mileage. The possible prices on a 2-3yr. old EV, could be a bargain compared to new pricing. Just don’t expect to resell it in another 3yrs., with 60-70k on the clock for much more than scrap value.
To get an i-Pace listed on autotrader for less than the price on screen it's 30k Miles & 2022 or 2021. One hopes the fall is an indication a similar proportional drop will occur on the forecourts.
Why would a 6 year old car still within it's battery warranty be worth scrap value?.....
I think these are closer to auction prices, not the price a normal person shopping at a car dealer would pay.
@@bwarey52- 2yr. old EVs with 10,000mi per year losing 20%-nearly 40% on original sticker price. I’m not say depreciation is a linear progression; but you have to wonder how much they’ll be worth, with treble the mileage and the ever changing EV tech.
Throw away cars, The depreciation for electric cars is awful. They make absolutely no sense. Imagine a tower block with 40/50 families, how would they all charge them up! They are an absolute joke.
These ARE trade prices. Cheapest 1yr old Lexus UX 300e is about £24K. Most £27K upwards (not £20K) ! Autotrader prices. Why use trade prices for your comparison ? Still massive bargains compared with new though 👍
The captions do actually say Trade Value 🤷♂
@@InBodWeTrust I know, but the way they were talking it sounded like the general public could buy them for those prices. 😊
totally agree, what are they thinking to quote trade prices that most of the people watching can not purchase at. why not just quote actual prices, very very annoying video
Yet another ‘click bait’ video… joe Average can’t buy at these prices 😏
@@nicksportster8711Never understood why people trade cars in for new models. You are always better off selling and buying privately. Especially with cars under 2 years old!
The garages and forecourts have to make money somewhere, a forecourt 'deal' is never the best deal...
Twelve year old Imievs now being refurbished with new batteries. With the new battery the Imiev has twice the capacity and range of the original.
Since seeing 2/3 year old iPaces in the mid twenties late last year I’ve been sorely tempted. We had one for 6 weeks while our Ioniq 38kW was waiting for a replacement part. The range and charging speed isn’t up to more modern EVs, and JLR reliability is always a concern in the back of my mind, but it’s such a nice car to drive and to be in, and size wise it’s perfect for our family.
There are plenty of bargains to be had out there.
That reliability problem should be front of mind for an expensive marque which is out of warranty.
@@maximilianholland absolutely. 👍🏾
Just get one with a minimum 2 year manufacturers extended warranty. Most JLR dealers are offering this at the moment.
@@markjackson8035 does it have good coverage for the items that usually fail on them.
My cousin has one and tbh hasn’t complained about any issues.
It’s not just EV,s that have dropped. The used car market in general has had a period of new year adjustments. Whatever new car you buy, you’ve lost the vat,dealer margin, first year costs etc.Quite a big drop, on its own. Glad some sanity has taken hold in used car values. They’ll be more decline as the year progresses. At least more EV,s will be affordable and available, as the earlier cars on lease and contract, enter the market place. Thanks for the content.
You've mentioned the Scottish Used EV loan in a couple of podcasts, however, the loan was closed to new applications around the end of November 2023 as they had run out of funds. There is currently no indication as to whether it will return in the new financial year.
exactly what i was going to say.
This has happened every year. It usually reopens in April- but considering the SNP's abysmal finances currently I wouldn't be surprised if the shelved it.
@@hamsterminator I would suggest that bearing in mind the news today that the UK economy is in recession, it’s not just the Scottish Government’s finances that are abysmal, the Tories are also looking at slashing public services (if they haven’t done that enough since 2010). The difference here is that the Scottish Government are probably balancing the books and prioritising, whereas the Tories are slashing public services to provide pre-election tax bribes to the electorate. We can politicise this if you wish, but it’s really not helpful.
@@northyorkshirechris5735 I bet you don't, your type never do like the truth, unless its favorable to your point of view.
@@padgepadgham3238 A personal attack to a benign comment is unwarranted and is contrary to this forum's rules.
Recently I bought a 1 year old, with 10k miles, VW ID.5 Pro Performance style for 28k. The car is great and looks like new. Only problem was the battery health, it is at 92%. The car was used by the dealer as demo/company car and I don't think they cared much about treating the battery well - probably always DC-charged to 100%.
I think the VWs take a big hit in battery degradation in the first year or 2.
I picked up a 2 year old ID3 recently and has lost 6%, still plenty enough for me.
At least VW have sensible battery prices (at least in the USA). Not like Hyundai where the battery costs as much as the car (in Canada).
When I was looking at e up January/Feb time last year a 70 plate with 20k miles at main dealer with 2 years warranty thrown in for around £16800 maybe. Later got one in September at non franchise main dealer with 22k and they knocked £3k off so £11999. Worth the years of saving and watching market cone to me.
I bought a beautiful Audi Etron RS Gt one year ago for £120K and have done 4300 miles. It’s now worth £65K. Disaster. The reason is that the public have woken up to the electric car/ climate change con and fewer people want them whilst there are many more on the market.
we have a 4 year old Citroen C5 Aircross 1.5 addblue diesel that has only decresed in its value 2k in the last 12 months, enough said.
The Corsa depreciation thing hits me hard...
I was stupid and got an e208 nearly 2 years ago at £32k on PCP and now coming up to 2 years it is already closing in on the balloon payment in terms of valuation. Like jesus I hate myself for this.
Just think of it as a lease car and hand it back at the end of term. The horrific depreciation is the dealer's or manufacturer's problem then. That's one of the advantages of a PCP deal.
I do feel for you though, not having any equity in your car to trade up with. It's definitely worse for EVs than ICE cars as well. My daughter's Kia Picanto will be worth about double the 3 year residual payment of £6000 when her PCP ends in a couple of months time.
Buying at the top of the largest car value spike was always a disaster waiting to happen.
If you think it's bad in the UK, in the US they got all that plus insane markups from the stealiships.
Honestly expecting a mini sub-prime implosion in the next 18 months
I got a e-corse brand new in July 2022 on a pcp. I’m treating it as a lease, so I will be definitely handling it back as soon as I can. The only bonus is that I only pay £260pcm, so it’s not that bad for a brand new car, and I must admit the car is really good for what I use it for. But at the end of the term, 4yrs, it’ll be almost worthless.
@@darthja8292 did you manage to get the pcp with 0% deposit?
If so lucky escape in a way
@@stuartburns8657 sort off. I traded in my old car ( 2010 Suzuki swift), which they gave me £2k for, and that covered the deposit and also the installation of the wall charger, so I think I got a half decent deal.
No one seems to consider the insurance costs ? The comparisons were interesting but i would not be tempted.
This is very interesting and the value drops are pretty consistent - around 37/38%. It would be very interesting to see how this rate of depreciation compares with equivalent ICE and Hybrid model values?
The huge over-pricing that went on as legacy auto makers started to develop their EV offerings is now quite clear to see.
I agree - even a cursory reference to the equivalent ICE cars' depreciation for each of these would've (hopefully... ) shown that these MASSIVE drops in value are not just unique to EVs... 🤞
From what I am seeing EVs are now down at about the same price as ICE. With cars like the Kia Niro, and Hyundai Kona it is easy to do comparisons as they are available in both guises.
Taking Tom's pick of the Lexus UX on Autotrader there is a 2022 EV with 4380 miles for £20000 while a comparable Hybrid is £22000. I am guessing that the EV was originally more than the Hybrid.
How much longer those batteries can last though?
Car I am looking at maybe buying would be the e-niro, just looks great from all the reports I watch and see.
Had one for 3years and not one problem. Very reliable cars
The e-niro is a very nice car for a sensible price, and great range and efficiency. The _only_ disadvantage is relatively slow fast charging (50kW, where newer cars are 100+). But if you don't fast charge on the go often/at-all, then you don't care.
Looks great… I suggest spec savers🤓
@@xxwookey77Kw dc not 50. Agreed still slow by modern standards but I’ve been next to a Jag I-pace with 100Kw and it was only pulling 6Kw faster than my e-Niro at almost the same state of charge. The e-Niro’s range though is hardly beaten by any 2023 issued cars
@@graham5649 Thanks for the correction. Peak power is not necessarily all that informative - how long it stays high makes a big difference. I wish it was easier to find charge curves for all cars as it's an important bit of info.
Traditional car makers are going to go bust if the can’t sell new EV’s at high prices. Chinese are coming to get you !!!!
Legacy brands are not competitive at all. I seriously doubt if they don’t joint venture with a leading battery manufacturer, they will croak
Not used car depreciation, I bought a BMW i4 40 a year ago, the depreciation has been shocking. The same car at autotrader prices shows over 30% depreciation in year one, and that's at retail prices, not part-ex, so reality will be much worse. This goes on my list of things I wish I'd known previously.
LOL. only Fools rush in. If only you'd know the massively inflated were going to come down.
@@SB-hr5yr Yeah yeah, I'm eating humble pie and it tastes sour. (It's still a nice car though.)
Have no love for a man who laughs at the brave. Take it on the chin and move on. Cheaper then a divorce.
We leased our eNiro 3 years ago in part because of uncertainty then and in part affordability. Love the car and will lease again next year. @@modernschoolatlas
I have 2007 diesel C-Max bought for £4000 in 2017 - still running well with no problems. I'll replace it this years with another 10 year old car (possibly another 10 year old C-Max diesel.) I have Zero interest in an EV at ANY price.
I'm not sure where these depreciated prices are coming from (probably made up during someone's lunch break!) but they're not reflected here in Surrey/Hampshire. I checked my used prices from the start of last year with what's available now and, if anything, prices have gone up, not down. Yet another example of 'journalists' not checking their sources just to make a clickbait video. Well done!
Of all the runabouts the VW E-UP makes most sense in the city. Great spacious little car... Totally super efficient and well made. I would always chose the VW against the Corsa.
You can get a weird amount of stuff in the triplets (Up, Mii, CitiGo). Love it
@cannygrowabeard I totally agree... Even 6ft driver with 6ft passengers in the rear!! Of course you would never believe it from looking at the outside.
A year ago second hand EV prices were still inflated due to supply chain issues. Great to see the prices down to more realistic levels now.
I think the manufacturers purposely increased the prices on EVs to slow down the transition from ICE vehicles. Now they need to clear their inventories as newer EV cars are coming at lower prices and better ranges. Great for consumers wanting to switch to an EV but were scared of the depreciation. If you don't do long commutes and can charge at home, their are some great bargains out there. Go get them!!!
EVs are expensive to make. That's why they are expensive to buy. James Dyson spent 500 million pounds to make a small cheap EV and discovered that EV makers were losing money on every car sold so he abandoned the idea. There will be plenty of EV makers going bankrupt in the future.
@@mgcarmkm4520 Some will go bankrupt. Battery prices are plummeting. More manufacturers will copy Tesla's Giga Press fabrication. There will be a rationalisation of software systems as manufacturers find it cheaper to buy an industry standard platform that they can customise. But yes, some brands won't be here in 10 years. The French seem to have invested a lot in EVs and are going to release sub £25k cars in 2024, before Tesla's model 2 in 2025. If they can gain market share in 2024 and get economies of scale, they will do well. I think Polestar might struggle because it is a luxury sector they are operating in and they don't have a volume offering.
All cars went up in price because of the component crisis.
@@mgcarmkm4520 With 500 million £ it is imposible to make a competitive ICE car, but not imposible to make a competitive BEV.
@@yoyyaesta4808 I'm sure he knew that 500 million wouldn't deliver a new EV. They bought EVs from other carmakers and dismantled them and discovered that every single make was being sold at a loss. VW estimated they would have to invest 30 billion euros to deliver a range of EVs so 500 million is a drop in the ocean. Legacy carmakers that sell ICE can absorb some of the losses through their ICE sales. BYD are essentially backed by the Chinese government and can absorb huge losses. It will normalise over time.
even list prices are fantasy, on one discount site the MG ZS EV is discounted by 27% which is £9500 off list and dealers still want high prices for other makes they are selling, EV technology is advancing so rapidly with different battery chemistry it pays to wait for a couple of years to buy new
I have an MG ZS EV MkII and I believe that MG are set to bring out a new model of this car later this year. Hence the price drop - they need to clear old stock...
I dont know why people who bought a new EV are complaining of the drop in their value over 12 months.The one year depreciation on any new car is always high .If you buy a new car and plan to keep it for a number of years the fall in its value is just on paper.
The thing is dont buy an EV new until the market has settled.They are still relatively new technology (at least for the battery and charging speed) and I believe in 5 years time battery life will be much better and cheaper.
I bought a Nissan Ariya about 14 months ago, knowing full well that the value would fall. It’s inevitable when dealing with such fast pace developing tech. My intention is to keep it for at least 6 years… maybe longer.
I was just to buy one new last week at comparable Tesla prices, when I made a search on similar 3 year old cars and was shocked on the depreciation, so I hold back the decision. I like the car and hope you have been pleased with yours as well.
Good luck keeping this thing for 6 years
Maybe if you are not driving doing only 10 000km per year
Great video, thank you, could you make another one with the 10 least depreciated ones?
Where can I get the cars at the prices you commented on?
Im sure I read that insurance companies were not insuring them , and if they did they were sky high. Ill wait for Hydrogen to become affordable in future, oh and the battery replacement, put on my mortgage lol
Let's not forget these are trade prices. Retail is going to be more and in some cases a lot more.
As an old mechanic I love the new tech EV... But the increased weight, worry On batteries, depreciation, initial cost, software lockout.... Yes it puts me off...my old diesel 225k on clock drives like new, had it eight years and it only cost £100......free motoring v mortgage on car... No brainer... Sticking with my diesel 😊
8 x annual service = £100? No brake pads? "free motoring" includes free fuel? It's not quite free but I do accept that currently EVs have a higher sticker price when new. All brands (except Tesla and just this year Volvo - although that's just a badge owned by Chinese automaker Geely) in the West are losing money on every car. When they sort out manufacturing efficiencies (or just go bust) prices will continue to come down until they're cheaper to buy initially than ICE. Until then enjoy your diesel but please don't leave it ticking over near my kids.
Can I ask about tire wear in EVs
@@garyrooksby I can't promise those huge trucks that have diesel engines in them , transporting the food that feeds your kids will have stop start or even adblue.... Not that mine has either but lots of pollution there .. And even your cars battery has an enviromental cost you eV types like to deny, power generation... Oil, coal, gas or nuke... When no solar or wind.. Not as clean as you like to think... 👍
Basically they were wau overpriced new because manufacturers still needed to sell ice cars. The 2nd hand prices are realigning with equivalent ice cars. Which is great for used buyer's who have home charging.
In my personal experience depreciation only matters if one changes their car too often. I keep my car for a minimum of 10yrs (13 in one particular case) and then throw it away. That's 10% depreciation per annum or less if I keep it longer. No complaints from my end.
Phew, Mini iElectric isn’t in the top ten as I was expecting it to be - high initial purchase price and low range count against it BUT it’s huge fun to drive, well built and pretty efficient unless you really really thrash it (which is great fun though!)
Companies could right off 100% of their EV's against tax so they all went out and bought expensive Porsches, now they are a few years old they are all hitting the market together.
Hello from the west coast of Canada. No new technologies keep any resale value when the technology is still rapidly improving; when I bought my '23 Chevy Bolt euv in early 2023, I didn't expect it to have any residual value; I wanted an inexpensive, good-quality ev, and that's what I got. If the Bolt has zero resale value, it might end up being a battery storage system for my impending solar system.
Chevy and quality don’t go together 🤣🤣🤣
@arxeiapersonal8109 - I didn't think so either, but Orion assembly did a great job on the Bolt.
Depreciation as a % of the new price caused by the falling new price actually is only harmful for the accountants and not for the average user who will get his new car for the full price reduction.
I wish the cars were available to us at those prices. Trade prices are so much lower than consumer prices for 2nd hand.
It would also be interesting to have had the current day new car price for same model and battery capacity.
Also remember that the prices a year or two ago were still held high as supply of chips and parts were limited and new cars were often dlayed by months. These affects were still keeping second hand prcices too high. Then we compare to good supply and normalised prices. i feel this could show the bad value of EV''s and put people off who want a new car. However ideal for the prices more people buy at.
Retrofitting Eva with salvaged ice engines will be a niche market
We had one EV Evangelist in our family , she is a school teacher and talked for several years about buying an electric car and told us all we needed to buy one NOW . 18 months ago she got a full electric skoda enyaq on a PCP . after one year of nightmare, of range anxiety and 3 times being stranded plus costly and time consuming charging driving the 620 mile round trip to visit her father she has changed it for a petrol skoda at enormous financial cost . Our conclusion is that for all but the committed enthusiast that makes the use of their car their main focus and passion the currant generation of electric cars and electric infrastructure are not fit for purpose. Hydrogen and CNG look to be far more user friendly solution. Running my 119g co2 bmw 520d for another 10 years looks a lot better for the planet than building an electric car anyway.
Yet, I can speak of 2 people who love their EVs
For some the electric car is wonderful , if they can charge at home or work on a low tariff.
If they don't travel far from home especially the unpopulated north .
If the huge cost is not a problem.
At present we live in a flat with underground parking no possibility of charging and the insurers now suggesting that electric cars may not be acceptable in the basement My wife has a 90 mile round trip to work where there is no charging.
I have a 140mile round trip to work at present but stay over 2 to 3 days a week. My wife works as an office manager in the health service under 30k per year I work in construction so have very variable income . I usually travel by motorcycle to save fuel. We live fairly well because we budget and are careful. We gave our 13 year old 200 thousand mile car that I have maintained myself to our daughter this year and bought an eight month old Skoda Scala 1.5 (just a little bigger than a vw golf ) from skoda main dealer this ex skoda uk management car cost £15300 way less than half the cost of an electric car I expect it to last 10 or 12 years. and I can maintain it myself
Could I respectfully as that you climb out of your upper middle class bubble , go and speak in detail to some working people , examine how the finances and how the lives of the millions of ordinary working people function .
We leave for work at 5.30am latest my wife does minimum of 37 hours over 4 days she is an hour away at 6.30am for a 7.00am start she often does not finish until 6.00pm home after 7 .
Electric cars for most are not practical , they are not affordable , and they are in many ways as bad or worse for the environment than their petrol diesel equivalents. @@localreviewking134
@@grantwebster8157 I am confident batteries will improve, in time. The main concern is longevity of the ones we have now. Perhaps, how safe they are in terms of fire. We do see a more level playing field with prices too.
The little Dacia Spring will sell like hot cakes, I guess.
They are here to stay, like it or loathe it. We, do still have choices, just.
They're great daily drivers if you can charge at home. For most people daily drive is under 100miles, often closer to 50 miles.
But as always dumb people come and try to eat bowl of soup with a fork.😂
If someone without home charging capabilities buys one (10-25p home vs 30-60p per kwh at charger) and on top of that they buy it for 600miles holiday trips instead of daily commute then they deserve all that's coming 😂
With this level of depreciation, it just shows the majority of people aren’t buying in to the EV BS.
Good to see that the MG4 was not in the top 10 😊
Will they be ridding still after 40 years?
Currently there is an Ioniq 5 73 plate with 18 miles on the clock going for 33k. Basically new with 14k off.
Good news for anyone wanting to jump into an EV.
Well worth considering if the Ioniq is your bag.....
I would love it, however I’m considering leasing one through work.
I won’t pay more that 4-5k for an EV… but I pay cash
Great video!
It would be interesting if you did a comparison to the drop in resale value of ICE models over the same time.
Very good point!
Can you do the top 10 for the least value lost please?
I’m not so sure that price drop is that exceptional when you look at percentages. There was a saying when I was much younger and looking to buy my first car: ‘the most expensive trip in a new car is the first one, from the dealer home. It cuts the value in half.’ So for 30 years, I only bought 2nd hand cars and drove them until they got too expensive to repair.
The big question is what the price drop will be after 4 or 5 years, when the loan ends and the big last payment has to take place. That’s usually the moment to decide to make the payment or to drop the car and renew the loan agreement for a new car.
Side note. Bought my first new car 4 years ago: a Seat Mii Electric. Love it! Not going to sell it anytime soon.
I have said on all of your reviews of the iPace that anyone buying into this model will loose a lot of money. Plus the iPace may be a lovely drive, but it is dreadfully unreliable. NOT made by Jaguar. Any warranty claims means massive delays, in waiting for parts.
This says more about the mad pricing for new EV rather than the drop afterwards
Lost 8k on my 71 plate long range leaf which resulted in my Ariya order being cancelled. Now left in negative equity. Had petrol/diesel cars prior and never been in this position. Unsure whether electric is still the future. Did I mention my insurance has doubled to £550 yearly 😡
Just on the insurance front. I doubt the increase is solely down to the car being an EV. When the auto insurance premium, have nearly doubled across the board. Unless you own a Hyundai or Kia or JLR. All of which are too easy to steal and consequently, their insure has skyrocketed.
Hopefully more vehicle manufacturers will start offering insurance options and will undercut the greedy insurance companies in the UK. They have not seen these massive increases in Norway where Evs are now outselling ICE by a huge margin or elsewhere in western Europe either so its just the greedy UK insurance industry at play.
insurance premiums across the board have doubled and EVs are totally the reason for this.. no repair garages wants to touch them so most RVs even with silly small damage repairs are being written off by insurance companys..and people with diesel or petrol cars are paying for it with massive increased policys
Same. Got LeaF 40 in 2022. This year negative equity about 6000! Forced to patiently wait to PCP end, 2 more years left
@@audriusa5368 have you heard of the halves and thirds rule? In short when you have paid back half of the vehicles value you can return vehicle. I do feel your pain used car electric prices have fallen through the floor. Covid and Tesla didn’t help.
I sold cars at a new car dealership for 28 months. (I was told that was a record!) Customers were always shocked at how little their trade-ins were worth but I reminded them that when they traded in their cars, they were basically paying us to sell their car for them. It wasn't the dealerships that were setting the low prices. It was the used car buyers who were dictating just how little used cars were worth. Today, there's a glut of new EVs on the market. The dealers can't get rid of them. Someone looking for a new EV will settle for a year old one only if there's a 40% discount, otherwise, they'll buy new at a discounted price. Believe me, the dealership would love to sell their trade-ins for more, but they can't because it's the consumers who refuse to buy used unless there is a substantial discount. That's just how a free market works. When there was a worldwide supply chain problem effectively reducing the number of new cars available, used car customers were willing to spend more on used cars. It's all about supply and demand.
I'm laughing so much !! My 2016 diesel Tucson has lost over my 5yrs of ownership £3000 😊
Most of the trade in values of these used EVs are less than the cost of their replacement batteries if damaged or faulty. Interesting.
With an "official" range of 100 miles, you can see why people are avoiding the Mazda.
It just has a lower value .
I’d still buy one for the low price - it’s very well put together - and I don’t travel long distances at all - it’s designed to be a city car anyway.
@@datathunderstorm It's not designed to be a city car. It's a crossover SUV. The e-Up is a city car (with a range of 150 miles) and yes, for that, 100 miles is fine. I love my Mazda, they're great cars but with a realistic range of 80 miles (less in the winter) is mind-boggling with today's battery tech.
Then there's insurance. I just got quote on my ice car BMW Z4 E89, lowest fully comp. £225. That is what i paid 10 years ago for insurance. Will insurance steer people to remain in ice cars. OK it reflects the value of the car now.
Buy an eUP! If nothing else, for the giggle factor! I did.
Looks great fun round town. How is it on a motorway?
I saw an old 1974 Morris Milkfloat for sale recently and really thought that would be fun to say I have an electric van!! traditional lead acid batteries so I guess less likely to catch fire!
I can't rid myself of the mental picture of driving 10,000 miles and throwing £1 or £2 pound coins out of the window every time the odometer records each mile completed. The commentary concentrates on how much of a bargain the used cars might seem but I feel sorry for the customers who are taking the loss through depreciation at those rates. The depreciation only measures the price drop and doesn''t include any cost of loans that might have been involved in the new purchase. If this happened in the house market then I suspect that it would spark a revolution of middle class homeowners in the Home Counties.
A used ev is a ticking bomb with a expensive battery replacement bill at the end when it goes off
Note thong that batteries are almost universally covered but an eight year warranty… From my two years experience and 70,000 miles I’ve lost 10miles of range
They will last for over 150,000 miles and then degrade slowly. They don't just stop. V few battery replacements have been needed and most of those will be under guarantee anyway.
Some of the cars have the 12volt batteries causing problems because if they fail the whole system locks up, even if you are inside the car, you will not get out even the windows are locked up.
Insurance is a killer these days though
They thought they were going to force people into EVs but the public are having none of it thank you very much
Nobody is forcing anyone to buy anything.
@@Marvhead Yes they are gradually !
@@Marvhead come 2030 people will have 2 choices Buy EV or keep current car. How is that not forcing peoples hands?
They're delusional!
You love handing your £££s to the Saudi royals obviously.
I just bought a Zoe 2020 but with only 7000 miles for £11.5k the battery range indicated 220 miles so it was just driven around town. Reason for the Zoe is it can charge on AC on the street for 40p/KwH . No possibility to charge at home and dont want 80p/kwh for something like a corsa on a faster charge etc etc
Eh? So CCS charging rates are more expensive, or have I simply misunderstood? ...hey, it is late 🤣
@@matbowden9156 AC charging on the street is 40p/kWh but DC charging via CCS or ChaDeMo etc is 80-85p/kWh. So twice the price.
See chargeplace scotland map where it gives the price
@@roberthartley6629 👍 the closest charger to me is in PE28 2AA and works out at 82p per kWh. I think I'll stick with my off peak rate at home, but it's nice to know there is an alternative to zap map north of the wall I guess. Cheers 🍻
Another thing about the ZOE is it can charge at 22kW/h where other cars are 7kW/h or 11 if you find. a phase3 (rare as hens teeth).
I can't believe that your promoting electric cars and then proving to people not to get into these cars, simply amazing! Zero resale value on your money as soon as you purchase this car even after a 1 year you have just lost 37% of your value just from your purchase. So everyone who was thinking about getting into an electric car forget about it your burning your money doing so.
It depends on whether you want transportation or an investment. Prices are dropping because they are becoming common, and not being seen as a statement anymore.
Good News for people who have not purchased any type of car in the past 3 years. Sad News for anyone paying on a car purchased 1-2 years ago.
Wow. Journalists that are massively pro EV over ICE cars singing the praises of how cheap a 1 year old EV is. Missing the point entirely that they are so cheap because nobody wants them. If they’ve lost so much in 1 year think what your bargain EV will be worth when it’s 3 years old. All this countdown did for me was convince me not to buy an EV.
It doesn’t matter what the ongoing depreciation is if the original owner/PCP leases has taken the big hit. If you run it for several years you’ll reap the benefits of very low running & servicing costs. We bought a 2 year old tops spec e2008 with 16000 miles on it at 50% of its original list price and love it. Even if the value halves again in 5 years it’s still not expensive. I expect the landscape will be very different then and ICE cars will look overpriced and start depreciating hard.
@@markbennett6658 we will see who’s laughing when someone runs into your three year old £40k car and your insurance company pays you £10k for its market value. My point was its depreciation isn’t about to stop. That’s because most people can’t charge at home and if you buy secondhand you’ve got £1k min to pay for your own charger if you do have off road parking. ICE cars are holding their values stronger than ever in the trade. EV’s are not the future for a lot of car drivers. I do have a drive but there’s not a single EV on the U.K. market that can do what I need a car to do.
@@B16D4VE the depreciation never stops on anything. You can’t go motoring for free. I paid sub 20K for my car including the dealer mark up. Plenty of people have off road parking as do I. The £1K for the 7kw charger I see as investing for the future in the infrastructure of the house which now like solar and battery adds rather than reduces the value of the property. Much faster charging, better battery technology, improved range and production techniques I believe will make the pendulum swing the other way. I might be wrong but I don’t think so.
That's the point. These don't suit everyone, but are bargains for those who can accommodate them. I'm hoping for further drops personally. I've enjoyed watching these prices fall last year, I predict smaller drops this year though personally. Happy to be proven wrong though.
@@nickwhite6638 The other point in response to the reply from the original poster would be that if an insurance company pays out £10K on a 3 year old EV that cost £40K new that’s ok because you’d be able to source a like for like replacement for £10K. After all that’s ’indemnity’ the fundamental principle of insurance!
I love the fact you added video of the cars along with the depreciation statistics. Thank you!
Buying electric cars is more than stupid.
Trying to combat global warming and mass migration and mass starvation is more than stupid?
@@SqwarkParrotSpittingFeathers Electric cars do nothing whatsoever to combat global warming and mass migration or mass starvation, on the contrary, so you are stupid.
@SqwarkParrotSpittingFeathers the car sector is a very small part of UK emmissions and the UK is a very small part of world emmissions. If you really want to reduce your car emmissions don't continue manufacturing electric vehicle carbon release, which is much greater than an ice car or continue pumping carbon into the atmosphere from electricity made from energy released largely from fossil fuels anyway and contributing to mining environmental damage, as well as child exploitation and physical harm getting cobalt out of artesian mines in the Congo. Do what I did and ride a push bike to work for 25 years. You are polluting more than you need to by buying an electric car, which are only slightly better CO2 emitters than ice cars.
The least polluting option for cars, is keeping the one you have got until it can't work any more and using it as little as possible.
@@SqwarkParrotSpittingFeathersand you think ev will save the planet.... Stupid
Bad luck for private buyers.They have spent their hard earned cash ,encourage by the Government,pushed by the Greens to go electric and now face losing 50% of the value in 2 years.The most disappointing aspect is that EVs are not Green.
The electricity they use is to a large extent derived from renewables in the UK and elsewhere. I am at this moment charging mine from solar panels and happily not burning fossil fuels. I'm also leasing over a 4 year period and I'm happy with that and more than happy with the EV driving experience. Not going back to petrol thanks.
Your next video - getting some kind of explanation from the insurance crooks for the massive increases in insurance premiums on EV cars.
That would be amazing. The insurance on my ZS EV with 9 years no claims just went up from £1600 to £2500
My renewal went from £328 to £570. After discussions they reduced it to £406. No accidents in over 20 years
Not only electric cars
It’s the Sunak effect 🤣🤣🤣
I bought a petrol up for 6k three years ago, with 11k miles on it. Its worth at least the same now. I considered an e up briefly, but didnt see one less than 20 k. Im not sorry.
They’re cheap because people have realised they’re all CRAP! 😂😂😂
I have had 2 52kw Renault Zoe. Kept the first one about 3 months. Paid £18000 and got £11000 as a trade in. It was 1 yr old only 2000 miles on the clock. That was trading it back t a Renault dealership. The insurance costs more than an ICE CAR. The monthly maintenance I pay is a little over a third more than my ICE car. The cheap night electric was a con. Yes £0.089 a kw, but they put your normal kw cost up. In the end not being an high mileage user it was cheaper by £100’s a year to pay normal rate for electric (no cheap night rate) and the decreased kWh charged for that made our total bill less. After 2 electric cars and now knowing the hidden costs on top of the high price to purchase it and the shocking trade in price, won’t be getting a third one.
I don't really understand why used prices are so low, but it's fantastic news for me personally as my next EV, as my current and last one were also, will be a used car. Perhaps the ignorance about battery longevity that still seems to be rife, puts people off buying used EVs? One thing I have noticed, which is partly due to the greater choice I now have because of used prices, is how cars that were once high on my wish list around twelve months ago are dropping down that list because greater charging speeds are now within my reach. I used to lust after a 42kWh BMW i3, but I can now get a Stellantis car that charges at twice the rate. Not as interesting or as exiting, but practicality sometimes has to win out. The eUP or a ZOE ZE50 would have been excellent contenders, but when they only charge at 37 and 50kW respectively, the MG ZS, Kona, Niro, Soul are more future proof (just). Charging speeds date cars faster than anything else for me. If you never or rarely use public chargers, then anything on the list is as good as the next, more than once a month on a rapid charger though, and you have two lists in there.
@@garysmith5025 You are right of course. You have to do the sums to get the best balance. The big part of the equation that still steers me towards a faster charge speed is the fact that few cars are double the efficiency of the rest. The range seems to be between just under 3miles/kWhr for some horrendously 'thirsty' German behemoth to about 4 point something for a Tesla or Hyundai (we're talking motorway journeys here). That 30% difference could easily be 'out charged' if your rate is double or more. You hit on a good point that even ultra rapid chargers rarely hit anywhere near their peak. I am an eternal optimist though and dream of the days when they won't be throttled and the government will have put enough chargers in to cover the uptake of EVs and there won't be any roadworks on the M6, and roads will be repaired properly so that potholes don't appear as soon as the workers who fixed the last ones have left and...and...and....😆
Whilst I agree that the prices quoted are hard to achieve as a private buyer, the general thrust of the article is that of declining second hand ev values which cannot be disputed. New users will frequently be getting their car through a tax efficient leasing scheme which results in a higher proportion of new electric cars entering the market. When they are entering the second hand market the proportion of buyers does not reflect the same proportion, hence values are falling. I also think that there is wariness of how long the batteries will last, the public infastructure, and, unless you can charge at home, electric care are expensive to run.
Coming off a year where prices went a bit crazy it’s not that surprising and should be adjusted for that reason
I could not find prices like these on autotradder
I think there's an issue that people who can't charge at home aren't very likely to be in the market for a used EV. I imagine some of the crazy fast EVs are going to be unappealing to used buyers because of insurance costs. I generally don't like spending more than £10k on a car so there's still a way to go before I'm a potential buyer. I quite fancy a Mégane E-Tech and they're falling pretty fast.
The only stuff under £10k I can see either have battery leases, CHAdeMO or are rather aged.
I am leasing a Megane E-tech. had it for 6 months now. Love the car but had a couple of issues which are now fixed. 1. Car wouldn't consistently connect to my wall charger but a software patch Actis 6228 solved this. 2. Alarm kept going off when opening and closing car. The cause was the interior lights causing a current surge which set off the alarm. All fixed now. Range in winter is more like 190-200 miles rather than 280 it is marketed at but not an issue as i don't commute far. Teh retail price was £43k last August, but you can get a demonstrator now for £31k.
@@graemeglass7566 I'm glad you like it. I used to have a Zoe ZE40 and that had trouble connecting to the home charger. Chargemaster replaced the charger twice before the issue was resolved. 190 miles winter range is acceptable. I've seen some at £23k recently but for now I'll keep enjoying my Mercedes SLK, I paid £11k for it in 2020 and it's still worth £8k. I sold the Zoe for £13.6k but it's fallen a lot since then. It was £17800 new with a £6200 discount plus the £4.5k grant, battery owned too
It’s good, you can buy cheaper, but this is not good for the seller. Not good for trade-in value either. Why buy new when you lose so much value. Also I’ve heard dealers are not taking EVs as trade-ins after factory warranty expires. As a long-term solution it’s not going to be one size fits all. EVs have too many cons for me.
I'm sort of surprised/not surprised that none of the VW ID Series cars aren't in there. I suppose what I'm asking for is a top to bottom list. It would be nice to see the lurkers - the ones that were close-ish. Anyway, long may it continue. I might actually decide to buy, rather than lease to give back, one day.
Why did I lease 3 years ago? Because VW were almost giving away the 150kw/58kWh ID3 Life Pro for £239 pm including maintenance and tyres [initial £2.5K down]. Good car, crap software [still isn't great even with the facelift version]. Shortly after I took up my lease the ID3's went to well over £400 pm, where they've more or less stayed. Oddly, the Cupra Born [same-ish car] is way cheaper still. Anyway, I've just extended mine by a year. Yes, it has gone up under the same terms, but only by £40 pm, and my charging is free at work, so I'm not complaining.
I'm considering doing something similar but haven't yet looked into what would happen with any warranty claims on an out of warranty car (only 3 years on the ID.3).
Have you had any confirmation from your lease company?
@ckson8035 What? Confirmation that it is £40 [tbf, it's £41 and change] extra on the same terms? Yes, and I'm continuing it from April. There was nothing in the paperwork to suggest that one iota of my lease had changed.
Sorry, I was referring to the manufacturers warranty expiring at 3 years making the leasee (you or me) liable for any repairs needed after that time, if you extend the lease.
It's happened to several unsuspecting leasees - Auto Express did a feature on it, amongst others. It's unlikely the lease company will have taken out an extended warranty on your behalf. Worth checking with them.
Incidentally, a 10,000 mile, 1 year old ID3 of the same spec. as yours is worth around £19k trade-in. 50% of its new list price. At 3 years old with 30,000 miles it trades at £16k, 43% of list.
So, as with virtually all cars (EVs in particular), the bulk of the ID.3's deprciation is in year one. It's nowhere near as bad as the cars in this video though.
@ckson8035 Will do. Thanks for that information. If I find any interesting update I will post it here.
3:43 I took advantage of the loan in 2019 to buy a Tesla model 3 LR. Outstanding scheme although your credit rating has to be very good for them to give it to you. Up to £35k over 6 years 0%.