Rizzian
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Eric
- Joined
- Apr 25, 2024
- Threads
- 8
- Messages
- 148
- Reaction score
- 184
- Location
- NE Florida
- Vehicles
- '24 R1S Adventure Quad, '93 Honda Del Sol
- Occupation
- Healthcare IT
Love my R1S and recommend it! I'm over 2hrs from my nearest service center and have only owned it for two months. It's had to go back for one long weekend (Friday-Monday) to address some panel and gasket alignment issues. If you are coming from a mid-sized SUV, like that utility but want an EV, there really are not a lot of options, particularly with 3 rows of seats. I came from a lifted Toyota 4Runner with a roof rack, so there wasn't any alternative for me. The Model X is nearly 10 years old at this point, has no usable roof for storage or racks (because of the "falcon wing" doors), and to me, looks like a pregnant Model Y. Admittedly I haven't tried the Kia EV9 yet.
With regard to BUYING an R1S, I'd say lease it unless you really want to do a lot of modifications. To me, EV hardware is advancing at such a fast pace, your Rivian is only going to depreciate (sorry buyers). Even with a lifetime of over-the-air updates, owners are already salty about Gen2 R1 capabilities that are not backward compatible. Throw in a +20% increase in range and performance after only two years into delivering vehicles...yeah that's pretty steep development curve. Your depreciation curve is going to be just as steep in the other direction for the "outdated" model. If you're the type of person that is still rocking an iPhone 6 and you're not feeling like a newer phone is worth an increased monthly payment... you should buy an R1S. If you trade in your phone about every 18mos (when your carrier offers an upgrade)- then lease.
With regard to BUYING an R1S, I'd say lease it unless you really want to do a lot of modifications. To me, EV hardware is advancing at such a fast pace, your Rivian is only going to depreciate (sorry buyers). Even with a lifetime of over-the-air updates, owners are already salty about Gen2 R1 capabilities that are not backward compatible. Throw in a +20% increase in range and performance after only two years into delivering vehicles...yeah that's pretty steep development curve. Your depreciation curve is going to be just as steep in the other direction for the "outdated" model. If you're the type of person that is still rocking an iPhone 6 and you're not feeling like a newer phone is worth an increased monthly payment... you should buy an R1S. If you trade in your phone about every 18mos (when your carrier offers an upgrade)- then lease.
Sponsored