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Transportation

Tesla Is Starting a Certified Preowned Program 126

cartechboy writes Most luxury automakers have a Certified Previously Owned (CPO) program. Tesla isn't like a normal luxury automakers, in fact, it's not really like any automaker out there. It doesn't have franchises and it sells its own vehicles through its network of galleries. Now, it plans to create its own CPO program. There are a great deal of Model S sedans out there currently under lease contracts. When those cars are ready to come back, Tesla has guaranteed that it will purchase them for a figure that falls somewhere between 43 and 50 percent of the original purchase price. This is exactly how Tesla's going to create its CPO fleet. Tesla seems to do everything in an unconventional manner, so we'll have to see if its CPO program behaves like every other automaker's, or if it's different somehow as well.
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Tesla Is Starting a Certified Preowned Program

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  • by FlyHelicopters ( 1540845 ) on Tuesday October 07, 2014 @03:09PM (#48085593)

    I have not found the Tesla S to be all that interesting due to price. For what you pay, it is expensive, in my opinion.

    That being said, if they do a lease on a 3 year old copy for half the price of a new one, the monthly payment might get into an area that I'd be interested in.

    I would expect a 3 year old Tesla S to be in better shape than your average 3 year old car, the early buyers are going to likely have taken good care of it and if it comes with another 3 year warranty, then no worries.

    I actually wouldn't mind owning an electric, price is the primary issue right now.

    • by TWX ( 665546 ) on Tuesday October 07, 2014 @03:14PM (#48085649)
      On top of that, electric cars don't need the sort of fluids monitoring and maintenance that can make lease cars with gas engines undesirable; there's no, "don't change the oil for 50,000 miles, change it right before turning it back in" crap.

      Obviously regular wear items like interior parts, tires/suspension/alignment, and such will still be the same, but I'm used to driving cars up close to 200,000 miles anyway, so that's not such a big deal.
      • by Alomex ( 148003 )

        Additionally to fluids, electric cars are subject to much less vibration than combustion engines, which is one of the main causes of wear and tear in automotive parts.

        • by TWX ( 665546 )
          I'm not so sure that's as significant as you state.

          Powerplants of every kind take a certain amount of mass, and as they rotate they induce a certain amount of vibration. Electric motors over certain sizes or power levels are often isolated with their own shock-absorbing motor mounts, even if they're not much more than bushings or pillow-blocks. Even devices as lowly and underpowered as squirrel-cage fans in evap coolers and air handlers have bushings.

          With an electric car, you're deciding between usi
          • by Alomex ( 148003 ) on Tuesday October 07, 2014 @03:39PM (#48085931) Homepage

            Powerplants of every kind take a certain amount of mass, and as they rotate they induce a certain amount of vibration.

            Wrong: a free spinning wheel creates no vibration.

            Combustion engines create a lot of vibration by their very design with a crankshaft and four strokes pistons. Have you been on an electric car? the reduced vibration is notable. Other readers might have been on a dual diesel/electric train while traveling in Europe? One can tell when they switch to the diesel power plant on the station at the end of the electric line because of the increase in carriage vibration.

            • by Anonymous Coward

              Wrong: a free spinning wheel creates no vibration.

              An ideally balanced spinning wheel creates no vibration might be more accurate, but I agree that electric cars vibrate less (kind of eerie for the first little while really, especially combined with less noise).

          • While an electric vehicle won't be zero vibration it will likely be much better than a vehicle based around a reciprocating internal combustion engine for serveral reasons.

            1: IC engine vehicles need to "idle". That is run the engine with no load as part of the startup process and during short stops. Mechanisms running unloaded are much worse from a vibration point of view than the same ones running under load. Electric cars can simply turn the main motors off when stopped (accessories can use their own moto

      • I own one. It's not a lease program, it's a guaranteed buy back program. To qualify you have to purchase a service plan and take the car in every 5,000 miles. (So they can rotate the tires and grease the door hinges. Maybe they change the spark plugs periodically, too :-)

    • I'm very interested in purchasing or leasing an used S model Tesla.
    • I actually wouldn't mind owning an electric, price is the primary issue right now.

      OK, you're admittedly talking about Teslas here, so you're likely looking for luxury and/or the very long range of Teslas.

      However, if price really is the primary issue, and you *don't* need the huge range or luxury, some of the lowest end electric cars are under $200/month (I think some significantly under) for lease price.

      I bought my smart electric, and after fed & state rebates, it was about $16500, including tax.

      • If I was in the market for something like a Nissan Leaf, I would give it a serious look. After the tax credits and considering the deals on them, it might well be something to consider.

        The irony is that standard cars today are just as nice, if not nicer, than many luxury cars of years gone by. But I'm spoiled (yea, I know that is what it is), so I wouldn't look at such a car.

        The issue I'm having with the Tesla is that for what you pay, you're not getting a whole lot. It is missing a lot of things that I

  • Are all the owners beginning to sell just prior to the batteries reaching the end of their life?

    • by Alomex ( 148003 )

      Nope, battery warranty is eight years, so you are far off the mark.

      • by sycodon ( 149926 )

        It was a question, not a statement.

        • Are all the owners beginning to sell just prior to the batteries reaching the end of their life?

          batteries don't expire, they degrade over time. so it's not like there will be a day that is one day away from when the batteries go bad so you better sell by that day or else you'll be stuck with bad batteries.

    • by TWX ( 665546 )
      This isn't anything about owners, this is about off-lease cars. Leases are for predictable durations, so remaining battery life should be easy enough to determine.
    • I was going to leap to Tesla's defense here, but as I look into it, I think Tesla needs to define the battery warranty more clearly.

      On the one hand, Musk is saying [teslamotors.com] all the right things:

      Except in the cases of a collision, opening of the battery pack by non-Tesla personnel or intentional abuse (lighting the pack on fire with a blowtorch is not covered!), all damage is covered by warranty, including improper maintenance or unintentionally leaving the pack at a low state of charge for years on end. The batte

      • by Tom ( 822 )

        I'm not surprised at all.

        If they put it in writing, you can probably sue them on it. If I were operating in the USA, known for having more lawyers than mosquitos, I would avoid absolutely anything that has the slightest chance of landing me in court.

        IOW, if I planned to make a promise to my customers, but without giving a free "sue me" card to some asshole who wants to lawyer-abuse me because one i wasn't dotted or one t wasn't crossed, then a public CEO announcement would be exactly what I'd do, especially

        • Personally, If it was my company, I'd want the details clearly in writing and not subject myself to trying to explain in court what the CEO means in his public statements. It seems like it would lead to less abuse by lawyers. You can never avoid such abuses though, all you can do is make it as hard as possible to be found liable for more than you intended. Best way to do that is to draft an airtight warranty document.

          So that leads one to believe that this whole discussion was more of a bait and switch tec

          • by Tom ( 822 )

            Let me know when you've succeeded to sue a company in court for some marketing statements they made to the press.

            • by q4Fry ( 1322209 )
              Red Bull. Apparently, it does not in fact give you wings. If you have had one since 2002, you are eligible for compensation under a successful class action suit: http://www.energydrinksettlement.com/ [energydrin...lement.com]. I almost wish I were making this up.
              • by Tom ( 822 )

                It's not yet successful (hearing in 2015), and anyone can bring a lawsuit for any stupid reason. But if they succeed, I'll lose what's left of my faith in humanity.

                • by q4Fry ( 1322209 )
                  Ah. I should have read the details. My coworker presented it to me as if it were settled. Serves me right. :)

                  She said, "If you've enjoyed a Red Bull since 2002, you can get ten bucks..."
                  Me: "Enjoyed?"
  • A base model S for 50k, if you're not afraid of a few miles on it? It'll depend on what they do to the car: if it's "check a bunch of boxes" I'm not so sure I'm interested. If it's "Test the car and repair defects in the drive line and battery", that may be much more interesting.
    • This is a new car company engaged in a huge undertaking. If it were me, I'd want to know everything possible about every one of those vehicles on the road to help drive future so I bet there's a ton of useful telemetry that either gets sent in realtime or uploaded whenever the car checks in for a firmware update. As such, I bet a CPO Tesla would be a way better bet than a CPO Honda...

      • With a 'normal' car you get to see the mileage and whether "it looks OK at a glance" but that's about all you can tell about what kind of life it had previously.
        With a Tesla I don't see why you couldn't theoretically pull the entire black-box history.
        I'd like to buy a Tesla that never exceeded the speed limit and was only driven to church on a Sunday etc etc.
        • I'd like to buy a Tesla that never exceeded the speed limit and was only driven to church on a Sunday etc etc.

          Here's your new car sir....

    • Norwegians [jalopnik.com] are probably still willing to pay *extra* even for *used* Teslas.
  • by Animats ( 122034 ) on Tuesday October 07, 2014 @03:19PM (#48085699) Homepage

    "Pre-owned" - come on.

    • "Pre-owned" - come on.

      C'mon. All luxury vehicles are either new or "pre-owned".

      Only peasants drive used shit. The yuppies would never stand for such a moniker.

      Oh, and that's Certified Pre-owned to you, buddy. You know, 'cause we need another reason to charge $400/month for some used shit...

    • by OzPeter ( 195038 )

      "Pre-owned" - come on.

      Yeah .. but it's "Certified Pre-owned". How else are you supposed to know that it was actually pre-owned. They might be lying about that. This way you are 100% guaranteed that it actually is a pre-owned Tesla. And that's good to know. Being able to sleep soundly at night knowing that your car is really pre-owned is well worth the money you pay for it being Certified!

      • by Anonymous Coward

        I know you are joking, but the certified part is that they certify that the car is still 'up to snuff' after being used, not that they are certifying the used-ness of the car.

      • by Jeremi ( 14640 )

        Being able to sleep soundly at night knowing that your car is really pre-owned is well worth the money you pay for it being Certified!

        Well at least you know you won't end up like this guy [greencarreports.com]...

    • by xeno ( 2667 )

      Yes, THIS.

      A used car is a USED car, not "pre-owned" any more than I am "pre-dead" as long as I'm vertical, or the food in me belly is "pre-deficated."

      I bought my current car (a reasonably lux and sporty V8 sedan that originally sold for just under $70k) from a dealer after it came back from a 3-year lease program. I told the sales droid that if he used the phrase "pre-owned" instead of "used" I would have to assume he was concealing or distorting other information about the car too. I'm sure he would ha

  • by gurps_npc ( 621217 ) on Tuesday October 07, 2014 @03:35PM (#48085885) Homepage
    The lease ends and the cars are returned to the company that already owned them.

    I know corporations like to pretend that lease = own, but they are not the same.

    • Meh... I don't own my truck until the last payment is made, the title is in the hands of the finance company. :)

      Now a HOUSE you own, even with a mortgage, the deed is in your name...

      But a car? Unless you pay cash for it, you don't own it...

      That is why a car can be repossessed in 5 minutes, a house can take 60 days to a year to take away from you. (among other reasons)

      • by Paco103 ( 758133 )

        When I bought my car I had title in hand in my name. It had a lien on the back, but the title had my name on the front.

        And there are some other differences, much like in the home market. I own my home, but the bank has a lien on it. I get to decide what colors I paint the walls, any upgrades or additions I want to do, if pets or guests are allowed, etc. The bank doesn't make those decisions like the landlord did for my apartment or rental house.

        Similarly, a leased car has many restrictions. Usually som

        • Perhaps your state or country works differently...

          I don't get the title to my truck until the last payment is made, then the finance company mails it to me...

        • Your friend could have bought out their car for the same price as the used car somewhere else. One of the big advantages of closed-end auto leasing (the most common kind) is that there is a lease buyout price at the end. If the car is worth more than that, you buy the care for the buyout price. If it is worth less than the fair market value of the car, you negotiate to buy it at fair market value. The leasing company doesn't have a magic way to turn the used car into an asset worth as much as the lease
          • by Paco103 ( 758133 )

            I'm sure that is true, but some dealers have more desire to negotiate, some feel the number listed is the only number. It's the same reason it's sometimes worth driving a couple hundred miles to buy a new car, even when sales tax is the same. You'd think they'd lose business by never negotiating, but based on the number of people I know that actually paid sticker for their new cars, I guess it works for them.

          • You my dear sir, get a cookie for a great answer. :)

            Yea, that is it exactly... Still, one downside to leasing is that the penalties to break it can be expensive in the first year or two. Worse than for a loan. Yes, the value is the value, but they often can stick you for worse if you have to break it.

            One huge mistake that people make with leases is that they focus on the payment, not the other numbers. The purchase price does affect payment, but so much can be done to mess around with the deal and arriv

      • That is why a car can be repossessed in 5 minutes, a house can take 60 days to a year to take away from you. (among other reasons)

        I know you were talking about leasing, but it's been in the news recently about people with cars that were shut off remotely for late payment of car loans have been threatening to sue due to laws in some states about a loan not being delinquent for 30 days, yet the car would be remotely turned off within a few days of the "due date" on the monthly payment.

        • Fair enough... And I agree with you, until the loan is actually delinquent, the car should be yours to use peacefully.

          So if they are taking action before it is legally delinquent, then that would be wrong.

          The point I was trying to make is that 5 minutes AFTER it becomes delinquent, you can take the car. You CANNOT do that with a house. There are all sorts of notices you must send, you have to file with the court, provide time to the owner to catch up, etc. Then you have to file for foreclosure and that

    • by Kjella ( 173770 )

      Well, the 43%-50% guarantee price is for Tesla Financing, which is not actually a lease. It's a 60-90% loan financed purchase with a buyback guarantee from Tesla where you may sell it back after 3 years, you must exercise that option within 3 months or the offer is no longer valid. So in that case, it's a lease-like arrangement with an actual purchase back price. Apparently they also have a real lease program, under financing there's three options with cash being the third of course. I don't think many will

  • Plenty of car manufacturers will offer deals that you a guaranteed buyback value of a car 'bought' on PCP over here. It's usually a hook to get you to use that money as a deposit on buying another car from that dealer. Pay £3000 to 'buy' the 4 year old car you've been driving or get £3000, put that down as a deposit on a slightly better car and keep on paying what you were for your old car and have a bit of spare change to splash out on a holiday. I know Fiat offered this last time I went into a
  • by ArcadeMan ( 2766669 ) on Tuesday October 07, 2014 @04:19PM (#48086361)

    Who's going to be the first to open "Stan's Previously Used Teslas"?

  • Start at 1:49 [dailymotion.com].
  • by MMC Monster ( 602931 ) on Tuesday October 07, 2014 @06:50PM (#48087643)

    I never understoof the fascination of leasing a car for an individual. I can understand for a company, but most cars are worth something at the time the lease is over. Why give it back or have to go through more tortuous negotiating to buy the car then?

    If you can't afford to buy a car, perhaps you should look into a cheaper car.

    (I'm discounting those that lease $15K cars, since most leases are for more expensive models.)

    • As a CPO buyer, I don't care why they do it, but do like that I can get a 2 or 3 year old car at a substantial discount, while facing a much shallower depreciation curve. A BMW dealer mentioned to me that about 1/2 of their business is leases and about 1/2 is CPO & Used sales. Relatively few people buy outright new.

    • When we bought our Leaf we were told 95% of people were leasing them. I think I found some numbers that showed similar high lease numbers. I guess people were treating it like a new phone -- something they'd want to upgrade when the new model with a little bit larger battery and shiny new feature came out. For me, we bought -- it had the new battery chemistry so they degraded much more slowly and we figure given the warrantee we'll easily have a car with max 20% degraded battery when our oldest starts dr
    • "I never understood the fascination of leasing a car for an individual."

      A car is a depreciating asset, it never goes up in value.

      In that sense, it doesn't make sense to want to "own the car". If you get, say, a TrueCars.com price on a lease, as an example, the cost of leasing versus the cost of owning is razor thin.

      But with leasing, you can always get out of the car and into another one with full warranty, a fixed turn-in value and security against unknown events like the car gets wrecks or damaged in a
      • by q4Fry ( 1322209 )
        I bought a new (entirely coincidence: "Cash for Clunkers" brought new cars into used-car price range) car for the reliability scores. It has lasted 5 years already, and I'm hoping for another 10. When I bought it, my goal was to never buy another ICE vehicle, and I'm beginning to think that was a reasonable aspiration.

        The dealer asked if I wanted to trade it in for a newer model year "for the same or lower monthly payment." They lost interest when I asked if the payment would be lower than 0.

        I don't thi
        • I used to do the 'drive a car forever thing'. Now, I just want reliability and no worries. Driving a car for 15 years will always be the most economical.

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