# FMV Buyout Options at Lease End

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Last modified: 2026-05-29T19:39:17+00:00
Type: efin_guide

## Summary

FMV Buyout Options at Lease End. Comprehensive guide.

## Content

FMV (fair market value) buyouts are the end-of-lease decision point where you choose to keep, return, or extend. Each path has different financial and operational implications.

What FMV actually means

FMV is the equipment's market value at lease end as determined by the lessor. Most leases define it as the price a willing buyer would pay a willing seller in an arm's-length transaction. In practice, lessors use one of three methods:


Appraisal: An independent appraiser values the unit. Most accurate, rarely used because of cost.
Comparable sales: Recent auction or dealer prices for similar age, condition, and hours. Most common.
Pre-defined schedule: A percentage of original cost based on age (for example, 15% at 36 months, 20% at 60 months). Common for fleet leases.


For most equipment financed on a 36 to 60 month FMV lease, the buyout lands between 10% and 25% of original cost.

Your four options

1. Pay the buyout in cash
You wire the buyout amount, title transfers, you own it. Cleanest path if you have the cash and the equipment still has years of productive life.

2. Finance the buyout
A lender pays the lessor and you make payments to the new lender. Use this when you want to keep the equipment but do not want to deplete cash. New loan typically runs 24 to 60 months at slightly higher rates than new-equipment loans.

3. Return the equipment
You arrange delivery back to the lessor, undergo inspection, and pay any excess-wear or over-hours charges. No further obligation. Best when the equipment is worn out, your needs have changed, or you can replace cheaper than buying out.

4. Extend the lease
Most FMV leases allow month-to-month or short-term extensions at the existing payment. Use this as a bridge if you need 30 to 90 more days to decide or to align with your replacement purchase. Some lessors increase the payment 10% to 15% during extension months.

Which option is right for you


SituationBest option

Equipment is worn, you have a replacement comingReturn
Equipment is still productive, you have cash, you want it long-termPay cash
Equipment is productive, you want it, cash is needed elsewhereFinance the buyout
You need 30-60 days to decideExtend, then choose
FMV quote seems highIndependent appraisal, then negotiate



Negotiating the FMV

FMV is sometimes negotiable, especially if the lessor expects to sell the unit at auction. Negotiation leverage points:


Recent comparable sales below their quoted price
Service records showing higher-than-typical maintenance investment
Cosmetic damage or mechanical issues that will reduce wholesale value
Your relationship and history with the lessor (multi-deal portfolios get more flex)


Plan ahead. Start the conversation 60 days before lease end, not the week of.

What can go wrong

You miss the decision deadline. Most leases require 60 to 90 days written notice. Miss it and the lease auto-extends month-to-month at full payment. Set a calendar reminder when you sign.

Excess-wear charges exceed expectations. Returns trigger detailed inspection. Tires, glass, attachments, hour meters, and DEF system condition all get scrutinized. Document the equipment with timestamped photos before delivery.

You think you bought it but did not. Title only transfers when you pay the buyout in full. Until then, the lessor owns it. Confirm title transfer in writing within 30 days of buyout payment.

Get a real quote

If your lease ends in the next 90 days, request the FMV quote now. If you want to finance the buyout, apply for buyout financing at least 30 days out so funding lands before the lease end date.
