I am in the Dallas area and considering buying a used 2016 e-Golf. All the cars I am seeing listed are lease returns from California. A majority of them are listed on Carvana and include a shipping fee, so I’m assuming they are being shipped from CA as opposed to local stock. The listings are from $13K to $18K for cars with between 12K to 20+K miles.
Should I go for the lowest miles, or is it okay to buy one with more miles at a lower price? This car will be mainly driven locally to drop kids to school and activities, run errands, and shopping etc. So, not more than 15-20 miles on most days, with maybe 40-50 mile round trips on weekends.
What should I be considering before making a purchase and what should I check/test after purchase? Carvana offers a 7-day return policy in case something is not right or if don’t like the vehicle.
I had a leased Nissan LEAF for 3-years until a couple years ago and really miss driving an EV. From everything I have read, the e-Golf seems to be a better car than the LEAF. I know the expected range is 80+ miles, which is the same as the LEAF. But the LEAF had a battery percentage meter on the dash and I don’t think the e-Golf has that. Short of taking it to a VW dealer, how can I check the battery capacity of the car to see if its degraded or holding a 100% charge?
Not may VW dealers in Dallas are certified to work on the e-Golf, which is another challenge.
Should I go for the lowest miles, or is it okay to buy one with more miles at a lower price? This car will be mainly driven locally to drop kids to school and activities, run errands, and shopping etc. So, not more than 15-20 miles on most days, with maybe 40-50 mile round trips on weekends.
What should I be considering before making a purchase and what should I check/test after purchase? Carvana offers a 7-day return policy in case something is not right or if don’t like the vehicle.
I had a leased Nissan LEAF for 3-years until a couple years ago and really miss driving an EV. From everything I have read, the e-Golf seems to be a better car than the LEAF. I know the expected range is 80+ miles, which is the same as the LEAF. But the LEAF had a battery percentage meter on the dash and I don’t think the e-Golf has that. Short of taking it to a VW dealer, how can I check the battery capacity of the car to see if its degraded or holding a 100% charge?
Not may VW dealers in Dallas are certified to work on the e-Golf, which is another challenge.