I was at the Toyota dealer yesterday looking at a Highlander for my wife (who somehow manages to put close to 20000 miles on her Sienna every year), and the salesman tells me that Toyota forgives mileage overages on leases as long as you lease another Toyota (or buy at lease end of course).
I asked him if that was in writing anywhere and he says “Yeah, it’s in the paperwork when you lease the car, but I can’t show you that since you’re not signing a lease today.”
Needless to say I was skeptical, but then I stopped by the Audi/Porsche/VW dealer to look at the new Arteon. During the test drive I told the VW salesman what the Toyota guy said and he said, “well let me check it out.”
So he gets in touch with a manager he knows at a Toyota dealership, and the manager confirms what I had been told.
If it’s true, why doesn’t everybody sign for 10k miles per year to get a low payment and then turn the car in with 60,000 miles on the odometer after 3 years?
Does anybody have first hand experience with this?
It’s not unheard of for a manufacturer to offer some amount of mileage forgiveness if you lease a new one. I’ve never heard of it being unlimited though.
One of Honda dealer states that they offer 60k mileage allowance on any lease if you lease and return to them. Also told that it’s part of the contract. They 90 miles away from Los angeles. Tempting bait for sure
If they’re offering that then you can bet they’re making it up somewhere. Likely a stipulation that you have to sign at sticker, accept MF markup, pay for pinstriping, tint, scotchguard and nitrogen fill as well as forfeit all incentives. Pass.
Does it compute than TFS would allow you to return a leased vehicle with eleventy billion miles without any financial obligation on the part of the lessee?
This is all you need to know. A true Toyota dealer telling you straight from the horse’s mouth that TFS doesn’t offer forgiveness. Case closed.
No manufacturer will offer more than a few thousand miles at most with loyalty. Nissan will give you 500 toward overage, and GM just ended a similar campaign. If these manufacturers would just forgive all the miles by staying loyal, there wouldn’t be any need for residual values for different mileage tiers, and everyone would just do a 10k lease and rack up as many miles as they wanted.
This is just smoke and mirrors to get you to buy, and shady business practices.