Biggest Ownership Cost
Depreciation accounts for 35–45% of total 5‑year ownership expense — more than fuel, insurance & maintenance combined.
Find out how much your vehicle loses in value each year. See a year‑by‑year depreciation schedule, residual value projections & the best time to sell — across sedans, SUVs, trucks, luxury cars & EVs. Free tool by The Vehicle247.
Annual & cumulative depreciation for up to 15 years.
Sedan, SUV, truck, luxury & EV — each with realistic rates.
See the sweet spot where depreciation slows and resale peaks.
Adjusts resale value based on your annual mileage vs. average.
How your vehicle’s value changes over time.
Depreciation is the largest hidden cost of car ownership. Understanding it saves you thousands.
Depreciation accounts for 35–45% of total 5‑year ownership expense — more than fuel, insurance & maintenance combined.
Realistic first‑year and ongoing rates for sedans, SUVs, trucks, luxury vehicles & EVs based on industry data.
Bar chart shows remaining value vs. cumulative loss for each year — making the pattern instantly clear.
The calculator identifies the year where annual depreciation drops below the average — your optimal selling window.
High‑mileage vehicles lose more value. The calculator adjusts residual value based on your annual driving vs. the 12,000‑mile average.
No sign‑up, no data stored. Use the auto depreciation calculator as often as you need.
Depreciation is the reduction in a vehicle’s market value over time. A new car loses value the moment it is titled and registered — often dropping 10–15% on the first day alone. By the end of year one, most vehicles are worth 20–25% less than their original purchase price. After five years, the average car retains only 40–50% of its initial value.
Understanding this curve is essential whether you are planning a future trade‑in, evaluating a used car purchase, or simply trying to minimise the total cost of ownership.
Three inputs, one comprehensive depreciation report.
Purchase price, current age, vehicle type & annual mileage. Select your currency.
Choose 1–15 years. Optionally override the depreciation rate with a custom value.
Summary cards, visual depreciation curve, year‑by‑year table & best‑time‑to‑sell indicator appear instantly.
Plan every aspect of vehicle ownership with our free calculator suite.
Common questions about car depreciation and resale value.
On average, a new car loses 20–25% of its value in the first year. Luxury vehicles and certain EVs can lose even more, while trucks and popular SUVs tend to hold value better, losing closer to 15–18%.
After the steep first‑year drop, most cars depreciate at roughly 10–15% per year. The industry average is about 14% annually. By year five, the average vehicle retains 40–50% of its original purchase price.
Toyota Tacoma, Jeep Wrangler, Porsche 911, Toyota 4Runner & Honda Civic consistently top resale value charts, losing less than 35% over five years. Strong demand, proven reliability & limited supply drive their retention.
Historically yes — many EVs lost 40–50% in three years. However, the gap is closing as battery technology matures. Tesla Model 3 and Model Y now depreciate at rates comparable to popular petrol SUVs.
The sweet spot is typically 3–5 years old. By then, the steepest depreciation has passed, but the car is still new enough to command a solid resale price and hasn’t yet entered the phase of expensive repairs.
Yes. Higher‑than‑average mileage accelerates value loss. Every 10,000 miles above the 12,000/year average can reduce resale value by $500–$1,500. Keeping mileage low is one of the most effective ways to preserve value.
Slightly. White, black & silver are the most popular and tend to hold value best. Unusual colours like bright yellow, orange or brown can reduce resale value by 1–3% compared to neutral tones.
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