Phase 1 · Core Sovereign Layer

CapEx vs OpEx ROI Calculator

Owning isn't automatically cheaper, and leasing isn't automatically flexible-for-free. Compare both paths in today's dollars — salvage, maintenance and your cost of capital included.

Your inputs

Six levers. The decision re-solves on every tick — no Calculate button.

$100000

Cost to buy the asset outright today.

5 yr

How long you'll use the asset.

20%

Resale value as a % of purchase price.

$2200/mo

Monthly cost to lease the same asset.

$3000

Upkeep you pay only if you own it.

8%

Return your capital could earn elsewhere.

Lower-cost path
Compared in present-value dollars.
Buy cost (PV)
Lease cost (PV)
Salvage recovered (PV)
Capital preserved by leasing

Under the hood

The math, fully exposed

Both paths are converted to present value at your cost of capital, then compared:

Annuity PV factor = (1 − (1 + r) −N) ÷ r
Buy cost (PV) = price + (maintenance × factor) − salvage ÷ (1 + r) N
Lease cost (PV) = annual lease × factor
Decision = whichever present value is lower
  • Why present value: spreading payments over years is worth something. The discount rate prices that delay, so a $100k purchase today and $26k/year of lease aren't compared at face value — they're compared in today's dollars.
  • Salvage only counts if you own: the resale value is recovered years out, so we discount it back. The higher it is, the more buying pulls ahead.
  • Cash velocity is real: leasing keeps the purchase price in your business. If you can put that capital to work above your discount rate, leasing can win even when its sticker cost looks higher.

Your directives

What to do next, based on your numbers

Adjust the sliders to generate tailored recommendations.

Answers

Frequently asked questions

What is the difference between CapEx and OpEx?
A capital expenditure (CapEx) is a large upfront purchase of an asset you own and depreciate over time — buying equipment outright. An operating expense (OpEx) is a recurring cost for using something you don't own — leasing or subscribing. CapEx ties up cash now for a lower long-run cost; OpEx preserves cash and spreads the cost out.
When does leasing (OpEx) beat buying (CapEx)?
Leasing tends to win when the asset depreciates fast or becomes obsolete quickly, when you have better uses for the capital than the asset itself, or when your cost of capital is high. Buying tends to win when the asset holds value (high salvage), you'll use it for its full life, and you have idle cash earning little.
Why does this calculator use a discount rate?
A dollar spent today is worth more than a dollar spent in five years, and capital tied up in an asset can't be deployed elsewhere. The discount rate (your cost of capital) converts all future lease payments, maintenance and salvage into today's dollars so the two paths are compared fairly — this is the "cash velocity" effect.
What is salvage value and why does it matter?
Salvage value is what the asset is worth when your analysis period ends — its resale or trade-in value. Because you only recover it if you own the asset, a high salvage value tilts the decision toward buying. We discount it back to present value since you receive it years from now.