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expiredMalaibazaar posted Jan 05, 2025 04:50 PM
expiredMalaibazaar posted Jan 05, 2025 04:50 PM

24-Month Lease on 2024 VW ID.4 RWD Electric Vehicle

$999 down + $149 per month

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Deal Details
VW is offering a 24-Month Lease on 2024 VW ID.4 RWD Electric Vehicle for $999 down + $149/month. This offer is limited to select locations/dealerships only.

Thanks to Community Member BilalA6900 for posting this deal.

Note: $999 due at signing. Excludes tax, title, license, options and dealer fees. No security deposit.
For well-qualified customers. Limited inventory available.

Editor's Notes

Written by StrawMan86 | Staff
  • Offer Details:
    • Closed end lease financing available through March 3, 2025 for a new, unused 2024 all‑electric ID.4 Standard RWD, on approved credit to well-qualified customers by Volkswagen Credit through participating dealers.
    • Monthly lease payment based on MSRP of $39,735 and destination charges, less a suggested dealer contribution and application of a $7,500 EV Lease Bonus resulting in a capitalized cost of $27,436.49.
    • Excludes tax, title, license, options and dealer fees.
    • Amount due at signing includes first month's payment, customer down payment of $151, and acquisition fee of $699.
    • Monthly payments total $3,576.
    • Your payment will vary based on dealer contribution and the final negotiated price.
    • At lease end, lessee responsible for disposition fee of $395, $0.20/mile over 20,000 miles and excessive wear and use. EV Lease Bonus applied towards lease contract and is not redeemable for cash. A $395 fee applies if you purchase your lease vehicle.
  • Get 1%-5% cash back on deals like this with a cash back credit card. Compare the available cash back credit cards here.
  • Refer to the original post & forum comments for additional details & discussion.

Original Post

Written by Malaibazaar
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Community Notes
About the Poster
VW is offering a 24-Month Lease on 2024 VW ID.4 RWD Electric Vehicle for $999 down + $149/month. This offer is limited to select locations/dealerships only.

Thanks to Community Member BilalA6900 for posting this deal.

Note: $999 due at signing. Excludes tax, title, license, options and dealer fees. No security deposit.
For well-qualified customers. Limited inventory available.

Editor's Notes

Written by StrawMan86 | Staff
  • Offer Details:
    • Closed end lease financing available through March 3, 2025 for a new, unused 2024 all‑electric ID.4 Standard RWD, on approved credit to well-qualified customers by Volkswagen Credit through participating dealers.
    • Monthly lease payment based on MSRP of $39,735 and destination charges, less a suggested dealer contribution and application of a $7,500 EV Lease Bonus resulting in a capitalized cost of $27,436.49.
    • Excludes tax, title, license, options and dealer fees.
    • Amount due at signing includes first month's payment, customer down payment of $151, and acquisition fee of $699.
    • Monthly payments total $3,576.
    • Your payment will vary based on dealer contribution and the final negotiated price.
    • At lease end, lessee responsible for disposition fee of $395, $0.20/mile over 20,000 miles and excessive wear and use. EV Lease Bonus applied towards lease contract and is not redeemable for cash. A $395 fee applies if you purchase your lease vehicle.
  • Get 1%-5% cash back on deals like this with a cash back credit card. Compare the available cash back credit cards here.
  • Refer to the original post & forum comments for additional details & discussion.

Original Post

Written by Malaibazaar

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Top Comments

msetyon2
37 Posts
102 Reputation
i have the 2023 i'd.4 on a lease and can honestly say i'm counting down the days until this car goes back

one of the worst cars i've ever owned, technology is very poorly designed and frustrating, countless recalls and range is mediocre at best.

there are many more comparable options when it comes to EV. Chevy Equinox being one that is also very well priced.
Thaineseguy
4146 Posts
1087 Reputation
My personal opinion would be to get him a used car if he or she a new driver. Cheaper insurance and less fear of damage. Damaging a leased car is going to be costly. Not meaning to offend or anything, just providing my own experience as an ex-college student.
honestabe
1647 Posts
1320 Reputation
Might want to consider a used EV instead. Model year 23 one owner vehicles under 25k should qualify for an additional 4k discount. the lease deal looks to be 10k per year for mileage. Prices exclude taxes and fees. I have an id 4. Can't say I would recommend it

581 Comments

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Jan 06, 2025 01:42 PM
428 Posts
Joined Jun 2020
66DaysJan 06, 2025 01:42 PM
428 Posts
Quote from pchung6 :
Not very smart if you lease this car. Go get a Tesla please.
Having just got a new car I was turned off by Tesla. To each is their own, but I wouldn't recommend them.
Jan 06, 2025 01:55 PM
604 Posts
Joined Feb 2006
eugefJan 06, 2025 01:55 PM
604 Posts
Quote from superslickz :
Does anyone know if you lease a car, can an 18-year-old drive it? This seems like a great way for a college student to have a car for a couple of years.
I believe anyone can drive leased car (same as purchased car) as long as minimum insurance requirements met
Jan 06, 2025 02:02 PM
2,356 Posts
Joined Sep 2006
hpark21Jan 06, 2025 02:02 PM
2,356 Posts
Quote from bbu :
There is a up to $4K rebate on used EVs. From what I recall, the rebate is for 30% of the sales price, applies to 2 year old and older model years, has income limits, and you need tax liability (it's not a credit).
I agree. If EV will work out for you (it is not for everyone - I have 2 myself), 2023 models JUST qualified for $4k point of sale so if you want CHEAP car, then Bolt EV with not many miles is usually available for less than $15k

Interestingly, while you need tax liability, according to IRS website, there is no provision for recovery by IRS, which means if you HAPPEN to owe less than $4k in taxes, I do not believe you have to PAY the difference - of course, I am not an accountant so please refer to one.
Jan 06, 2025 02:04 PM
120 Posts
Joined Nov 2013
kit7katJan 06, 2025 02:04 PM
120 Posts
Quote from msetyon2 :
i have the 2023 i'd.4 on a lease and can honestly say i'm counting down the days until this car goes back one of the worst cars i've ever owned, technology is very poorly designed and frustrating, countless recalls and range is mediocre at best. there are many more comparable options when it comes to EV. Chevy Equinox being one that is also very well priced.
Having owned 2023 Bolt EUV and test drove Equinox EV, I highly recommend Chevy equinox at least to check it out. Bolt EUV has been the best car for commute to my family so far.
Jan 06, 2025 02:23 PM
3,637 Posts
Joined Dec 2005
ArcanlawJan 06, 2025 02:23 PM
3,637 Posts
Quote from bbu :
I looked into leasing a EV. What I didn't realize is some states charge sales tax. In my state the sales tax was almost as much as the lease costs (it was a cheap lease).

There is a up to $4K rebate on used EVs. From what I recall, the rebate is for 30% of the sales price, applies to 2 year old and older model years, has income limits, and you need tax liability (it's not a credit). There's some good used EVs on the market at good prices. Most EVs come with at least a 8 year / 100K mile warranty on the battery.

There's all sorts of lease cost calculators online that go through all the variables.
I'd love to do this but the income limits are super restrictive. Nobody I know that's married is anywhere near the AGI limitation.
1
2
Jan 06, 2025 02:25 PM
2,914 Posts
Joined Jun 2014
schlackJan 06, 2025 02:25 PM
2,914 Posts
Quote from superslickz :
Good point but not a new driver, been driving for 3 years, actually has a car at home that we are using, but at this rate it would be cheaper than shipping the car twice a year out of state.

But in reality going EV would be hard for someone living in an apartment in a red state. Need a similar deal for ICE car.
Shipping twice a year out of state?! Drive the car home. Or just don't have a car when home for the summer. Geez.
1
Jan 06, 2025 02:38 PM
11,686 Posts
Joined May 2007
superslickzJan 06, 2025 02:38 PM
11,686 Posts
Quote from eugef :
I believe anyone can drive leased car (same as purchased car) as long as minimum insurance requirements met
Thank you for the straightforward non-judgmental answer.
1

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Jan 06, 2025 02:41 PM
96 Posts
Joined Jun 2014
gdrocksJan 06, 2025 02:41 PM
96 Posts
I own a 2023 ID4 pro plus awd and am fairly happy with it. I've had it since 12/2023 and put well over 18k miles on it. After learning how much speed affects the power consumption, I do not have many concerns with range.
For me the downsides are: couldn't find one with 360 camera installed (all vehicles listed it as removed), can't secure vehicle from app (gives alerts if unlocked or windows open but can't do anything about it), no cooling seats (wasn't as bad as I'd expected though).
Major benefit to buying new over pre-owned is the ElectrifyAmerica promo, 3 years of free 30min DC fast charge (level 3) or 1hr level 2.
ETA: There have only been a few recalls, none with actionable items... for example, reports speedometer doesn't display if the infotainment restarts. For me, though, I have not had this happen even when I manually restart the infotainment system.
Last edited by gdrocks January 6, 2025 at 07:46 AM.
1
Jan 06, 2025 03:06 PM
2,138 Posts
Joined Sep 2022
norcal007Jan 06, 2025 03:06 PM
2,138 Posts
Quote from OceanTwelve :
Hybrid CR-V isn't cheaper, though. You can get a model Y for around $37k before taxes and fees (with the federal EV tax credit). EV tax credit probably going to get deleted this year, though.

Plus, I can fully charge my EV at my home for basically 1/4th the price of gasoline.

insurance was actually cheaper for my Model Y than my previous vehicle which was a Corolla. Liability only. Full coverage, 100% it's going to be more expensive just because very few auto repairs know how to repair it.
1/4 the cost of gas? Wow, what state is that as it's seems cheap.
Jan 06, 2025 03:14 PM
2,914 Posts
Joined Jun 2014
schlackJan 06, 2025 03:14 PM
2,914 Posts
Quote from Arcanlaw :
I'd love to do this but the income limits are super restrictive. Nobody I know that's married is anywhere near the AGI limitation.
$150k/year for a household puts you at 80th percentile of American household incomes. Congrats that you don't know anyone not living in the top 20% percentile of earners.
Jan 06, 2025 03:22 PM
2,914 Posts
Joined Jun 2014
schlackJan 06, 2025 03:22 PM
2,914 Posts
Quote from norcal007 :
1/4 the cost of gas? Wow, what state is that as it's seems cheap.
Not OP but I'm in Georgia and power IS very cheap - $0.0725/kWh.

Costs $0.025/mile for my Model Y.

Costs $0.16/mile for my VW Tiguan (premium fuel required).

The Y is 1/6th the cost to drive of my gas car. There's a reason everyone is driving Teslas in Georgia.

Worth noting it could be as low as $0.10/mile if I bought a very fuel efficient car that that doesn't require premium.
1
Jan 06, 2025 03:23 PM
259 Posts
Joined Oct 2014
ajajajaJan 06, 2025 03:23 PM
259 Posts
Quote from gaijin4life :
Where are YOU in CA? Up here in far northern CA, it's more like 15c/KWh for home electricity. 50 cents is nuts when the California average is only 30 cents. 50 cents/KWh is like a tesla charging station charge.
I'm at the Tesla supercharger in Norwalk California, 34 cent per kwh before 8:00 a.m. in the morning.
Pro
Jan 06, 2025 03:27 PM
1,559 Posts
Joined Dec 2005
alphawave
Pro
Jan 06, 2025 03:27 PM
1,559 Posts
Quote from ajajaja :
I'm at the Tesla supercharger in Norwalk California, 34 cent per kwh before 8:00 a.m. in the morning.
And then?
Jan 06, 2025 03:27 PM
2,138 Posts
Joined Sep 2022
norcal007Jan 06, 2025 03:27 PM
2,138 Posts
Quote from schlack :
Not OP but I'm in Georgia and power IS very cheap - $0.0725/kWh.

Costs $0.025/mile for my Model Y.

Costs $0.16/mile for my VW Tiguan (premium fuel required).

The Y is 1/6th the cost to drive of my gas car. There's a reason everyone is driving Teslas in Georgia.

Worth noting it could be as low as $0.10/mile if I bought a very fuel efficient car that that doesn't require premium.
Since I'm in CA, those electric rates are amazingly cheap! Right now in Bay Area, electricity from PG&E averages 34-74 cents per kilowatt.

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Jan 06, 2025 03:28 PM
2 Posts
Joined Apr 2023
WiseHome611Jan 06, 2025 03:28 PM
2 Posts
20000 miles? That's it. There are 1984 specs. Times change and commuters need more.
2

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