Skip to main content
DigiCalcs

How to Calculate Car Depreciation

What is Car Depreciation?

Car depreciation is the loss in vehicle value over time — typically the largest hidden cost of ownership. New cars lose 15–25% in year one and ~50% of value in 3 years.

Formula

Declining balance: Value = Initial × (1 − rate)^years; Straight-line: Value = Initial − (Cost per year × years)
V₀
Initial vehicle value (Currency)
r
Annual depreciation rate (Percentage (e.g., 0.15 for 15%))
t
Years held (Years)

Step-by-Step Guide

  1. 1Declining balance: value × (1 − rate) each year
  2. 2Straight-line: equal loss each year
  3. 3Low mileage and good condition slow depreciation
  4. 4EVs may depreciate faster due to battery concerns

Worked Examples

Input
$30k car, 20% annual depreciation
Result
Year 1: $24k; Year 3: $15.4k; Year 5: $9.8k

Frequently Asked Questions

Why do new cars depreciate so fast?

Dealer markup (10–15%), taxes, and the "new car smell premium" vanish instantly. Year 2–5 depreciation slows as you're past the initial shock.

How does mileage affect depreciation?

High-mileage cars (> 15k miles/year) depreciate faster. Standard is 12k/year. Each 1k extra miles reduces value ~$100–150 depending on vehicle.

Do EV batteries affect resale?

Yes. Battery degradation concerns and unknown long-term costs make EVs depreciate faster. A 2018 EV in 2024 may lose value to buyer uncertainty about 200k-mile reliability.

Ready to calculate? Try the free Car Depreciation Calculator

Try it yourself →

Settings

PrivacyTermsAbout© 2026 DigiCalcs