These are all the EVs you can still lease for under $300 a month
Published on Aug 16, 2025 at 4:20 PM (UTC+4)
by Alessandro Renesis
Last updated on Aug 13, 2025 at 8:31 PM (UTC+4)
Edited by
Emma Matthews
There are several EVs you can lease for under $300 a month, including one Tesla vehicle and a couple of Hyundais.
As it turns out, EVs can be cheap too.
Buyers can still benefit from the soon-to-be-discontinued federal tax credit, so that helps.
And one of the cars available actually starred in a superhero movie.
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These are the EVs you can lease for less than $300 a month
You can still find a few EVs that you can lease for less than $300 per month.
These deals often include a significant down payment, but then the monthly fee is quite reasonable.
The Hyundai IONIQ 5 and 6 are both included on the list, with a monthly payment of $129 and $169 respectively.

The Honda Prologue, Chevy Equinox EV, Kia Niro EV and VW ID.4 are also available, all under $200 per month.
Then there’s the Toyota bZ4X, which recently starred in Superman, and goes for $189 per month.
The only Tesla available in this price segment is the Model 3, but it’s more expensive than the others at $299 per month.
What’s going on with the EV market in the United States
The EV market in the United States is sending mixed signals, mainly because there’s a huge gap between states when it comes to EV adoption.
In EV-friendly California – even though apparently the state wants to ban Teslas – around 20 percent of new cars registered are EVs.
Obviously that still pales in comparison to places like Norway, but it’s still pretty good for the US.
Especially when you compare it the states where people don’t really buy EVs like Alaska or West Virginia.

This is probably also due to the fact that studies and surveys about electric vehicles also produce contradictory results.
There are studies that confirm that EVs are actually less reliable than gas cars, and other studies that confirm that EV batteries can outlive internal combustion cars.
But there’s one more thing worth mentioning.
In general, all studies and consumer surveys agree on one thing: most EV buyers don’t want to switch back to a gas car.