patrick0101
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jan 4, 2011
- Messages
- 368
Nice article. However, at the end, you mention the base price of the LEAF dropped to $21K. That is not correct. It's still $29K for the base LEAF S.patrick0101 said:
Here is my source for the $21k MSRP, from fueleconomy.gov:aarond12 said:Nice article. However, at the end, you mention the base price of the LEAF dropped to $21K. That is not correct. It's still $29K for the base LEAF S.
RonDawg said:$29,010 minus the $7500 Federal tax credit is how the EPA came up with the $21,510 figure. However, not all buyers qualify for the full credit, so nobody should be quoting that up front.
2k1Toaster said:RonDawg said:$29,010 minus the $7500 Federal tax credit is how the EPA came up with the $21,510 figure. However, not all buyers qualify for the full credit, so nobody should be quoting that up front.
If you don't qualify for the full credit, you shouldn't be buying such an expensive toy. Really who doesn't pay at least that in taxes and then goes out to buy a $30K car???
2k1Toaster said:RonDawg said:$29,010 minus the $7500 Federal tax credit is how the EPA came up with the $21,510 figure. However, not all buyers qualify for the full credit, so nobody should be quoting that up front.
If you don't qualify for the full credit, you shouldn't be buying such an expensive toy. Really who doesn't pay at least that in taxes and then goes out to buy a $30K car???
Add me to the list of those who purchased the car using savings, not income. I managed to retire at age 45 many years ago, so being thrifty allowed me to pay for my "expensive toy" while living quite comfortably on a tiny income, all of it from from savings and investments.2k1Toaster said:If you don't qualify for the full credit, you shouldn't be buying such an expensive toy. Really who doesn't pay at least that in taxes and then goes out to buy a $30K car???
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