You can have a lease written for high miles, but you'll end up paying so much for it, you might as well buy the truck and sell it at the end of the year. A lease is based on the depreciation of the vehicle over the period of the lease. A vehicle with extremely high mileage (for one year) depreciates far, far more than one with average or low mileage, so the lease price has to take that into consideration. A 60k mileage, one-year old car will have depreciated about 40% from its new car value. Again, my best advice, buy the Dodge on a three-to-five-year-buy, then sell it privately at the end of the year. You may be a bit upside down in your car loan, but you'll probably do better than leasing when you calculate what you spent in total.
2006-09-18 14:24:57
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answer #1
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answered by wynterwood 3
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A Lease is a Fleecing by the dealer on you and is good for losing money , your's.
If your plans are to put that kind on mileage on a depreciating liability, just throw your money out the window.
If you plan on wearing the truck out in one year - buy a solid used truck with cash. Use it up and dump it.
You need to visit DaveRamsey.com to learn about money usage and management before you go broke.
Oh most dealers would like to sucker you , you'd have more fun at a 'Gentleman's Club' with your money.
2006-09-18 14:36:13
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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In most dealerships, you can lease any vehicle you want. They usually offer 12,000 miles a year, but for more money you can tell them how many miles you plan on driving it. If you lie, and tell them 12,000, then you PAY at the end of the lease for the extra miles driven. Check with a dealer for more details.
2006-09-18 14:37:32
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answer #3
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answered by knownothing 4
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Probably not, at least for a consumer lease. Most are capped at 20,000 miles per year. A commercial lease might be a different story, but your payments are going to be a LOT higher.
2006-09-18 14:26:29
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answer #4
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answered by Bostonian In MO 7
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You would have to check with the leasing department at a Dodge Dealership. Most have toll free numbers, so it would not cost you any $$$ to find out.
2006-09-18 14:21:43
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answer #5
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answered by Hammer 4
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If you already plan on putting the miles on it just prepay the mileage. It is cheaper than paying at the end. There is no way to not pay for the mileage altogether. That is called a free ride. no such thing!
Cheers!
2006-09-18 14:23:39
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answer #6
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answered by Max B 3
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you may, but you would have to work that out with the dealer before you take the car off the lot. Usually, they only give 12-15K a year and charge you for each mile after that. If you work it out before hand, they might charge you more a month, but all that would be a business expense if you own one.
2006-09-18 14:22:35
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answer #7
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answered by Mike C 4
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it all depends the company and the lease agreement you had signed, when i leased my dodge ram i had it for 3years, and could only get 60,000, you may want to talk to a leasing agent, beware of leasing pickups, and damage to the bed and bad scratches they can charge you for damaging a vehicle,
2006-09-18 14:23:04
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answer #8
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answered by Quasar1 3
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I don't think that there is a lease program that covers 60k per year.
2006-09-18 14:28:47
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answer #9
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answered by Barry G 5
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That is a question to ask your local Car dealer. Be sure you have it in writing on the contract.
2006-09-18 14:23:58
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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