Nissan Prices Replacement Battery Pack For Leaf EV At $5500 Plus Installation

Nissan Prices Replacement Battery Pack For Leaf EV At $5500 Plus Installation
The battery pack is the single most expensive component in a plug-in vehicle and, until now, figuring out the cost to replace one has been a bit of a mystery. Last year, Nissan tried a $100/month price for a new battery in its popular Leaf, but was loudly criticized for that attempt. Today, Nissan is changing gears with a big announcement regarding the price of a new pack for your Nissan Leaf: $5,500 to buy. With an asterisk.

Nissan's Brian Brockman, writing at My Nissan Leaf, announced that Nissan Leaf replacement batteries are now available to purchase at certified Leaf dealers in the US at a suggested retail price of $5,499. These packs are the ones found in 2015 Leaf models, which are similar to the ones the Leaf has always had, just with a different, better battery chemistry. To buy a new pack, you need to give Nissan your original battery pack (which Nissan says will be recycled and has a value of $1,000) and the $5,500 "does not include tax, installation fees or an installation kit required for 2011 and 2012 vehicles." That kit costs around $225. A $100/month financing program will still be available (details will be made available later) but now it will have an end date and the driver will own the pack at the end of the payment process. All replacement packs will have the same eight-year, 100,000-mile warranty as the battery in a new Leaf.
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Agent009Agent009 - 6/27/2014 4:32:45 PM
0 Boost
Given the issues already with this battery pack and the 8 year warranty. It is probably safe to assume that most first gen Leafs will be off the road in ten years due to prohibitive replacement cost of the battery pack.

Gives new meaning to disposable.


MattDarringerMattDarringer - 6/27/2014 5:11:33 PM
-3 Boost
Not to mention that technology will improve. Why anyone would buy an EV is beyond me. Lease it. If anyone thinks current battery technology will be the same in 10 years, they're nuts anyway.


scenicbyway12scenicbyway12 - 6/27/2014 6:51:14 PM
0 Boost
So basically, after 8 years and 100,000 miles you're going to $5500 in resale value, on a car that already has dismal resale value.


t_bonet_bone - 6/28/2014 8:30:41 PM
+2 Boost
Or, advances over the next 8 years will make it cheaper and with better range...while gas prices keep climbing.




skytopskytop - 6/30/2014 5:54:05 PM
+1 Boost
Why not just provide a very, very long extension cord with each Leaf.


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